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W age Calendar 1976 U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics 1976 Bulletin 1898 Wage Calendar 1976 U.S. Department of Labor W. J. Usery, Jr., Secretary Bureau of Labor Statistics Julius Shiskin, Commissioner 1976 Bulletin 1898 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. GPO Bookstore, or BLS Regional Offices listed on inside back cover. Price $1.80. Make checks payable to Superintendent of Documents. Stock Number 029-001-01856-8 Catalog Number L 2.3:1898 Preface As in previous years, the Bureau has assembled a variety of information on anticipated union contract adjustments in this calendar year. Major situations by company and union are identified in which, during 1976, contracts will terminate, deferred wage increases will become due, changes in the Consumer Price Index will be reviewed, and contracts will be reopened. These data take on added dimensions as timely indicators because of some of the important movements that might be expected in an economy still subject to high unemployment and inflationary pressures, despite some signs of easing in recent months. This bulletin combines articles which appeared in the December 1975 and January 1976 issues of the Monthly Labor Review (with minor revisions) 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 with the Bureau’s Division of Industrial Relations and are open to public inspection. In addition, information was taken from published sources for additional situations where agreements are due to expire. Table 9 lists agreements scheduled to expire in 1976 by month and table 10 arranges them by industry. Tables 11 and 12 present the additional information taken from published sources, also by month and industry. Users should refer to appendix A for a list of common abbreviations; to appendix B for codes used in identifying the entries by industry, State, union, and employer unit; and to appendix C for a technical note on the data shown in tables 9-12. Table 13 lists 1976 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 tables 9-12 are listed in table 14. In several instances, tables 9-12 may list agreements and situations where the parties settle in advance of the scheduled expiration date, having been negotiating well before that date. However, they will still be listed under their original expiration dates. This bulletin was prepared jointly by Peter G. Kuhmerker and Lena W. Bolton, in the Division of Trends in Employee Compensation and the Division of Industrial Relations. Contents Page Bargaining in 1976 .......... Trucking ......................................................................................................................................................................... Automobile manufacturing.............................................................................................................................................. Rubber ........................ Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies............................................................................................................... Farm and construction machinery and equipm ent......................................................................................................... Scheduled wage increases and escalator provisions in 1976 ................................................................................................. Cost-of-living escalators ..................................................... Deferred increases............................................................................................................................................................ Effective wage changes ..................................... .............................................................................................................. 1 4 5 5 6 6 12 12 15 17 Tables: 1. Calendar of major collective bargaining activity......................................................................................................... 2 2. Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry............................................................................ 3 3. Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selectedcollective bargaining agreements........................ 7 4. Major collective bargaining contracts by industry, escalator clause,and number of workers covered........................ 14 5. Timing of cost-of-living reviews in major contracts expiring in 1976 and later years ............................................... 15 6. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1976, by major industry and size of increase ..................................... 16 7. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1976 in bargaining units covering 1,000 workers or more, by month .................. 17 8. Workers receiving deferred wage and benefit increases in 1976 in bargaining units covering 5,000 workers or more, by size of increase...................................................................................................................................... 17 9. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, by m o n th .............................. 19 10. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry ......................... 30 11. Additional collective bargaining situations expiring in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, bymonth .................42 12. Additional collective bargaining situations expiring in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, byindustry............ 49 13. Selected agreements reopening in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, by m o n th ............................................... 58 14. Late listing of agreements expiring in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, by m o n th ......................................... 60 Appendixes: A. Common abbreviations ...................................................................................... 61 B. Definition of codes .................................................................................................................................................... 62 C. Explanatory n o te ........................................................... 68 Bargaining in 1976 At the start of a relatively heavy 1976 schedule of bargaining, economic indicators point toward a con tinuing, if slow, recovery from the Nation's worst recession since the 1930’s. Unemployment, while remaining above 8 percent, is down from a May 1975 peak of 9.2 percent; inflation has moderated from 1974’s double digit rate. At the same time, many critical problems remain. United States indus trial production is still far below capacity. Future prices and supplies of energy and food and the fi nancing of municipal services remain uncertain. Major contracts—those covering 1,000 workers or more— in the private nonfarm sector scheduled to expire or be reopened during 1976 cover at least 4.4 million workers, up from 2.5 million in the light bar gaining year of 1975. Most of the workers are under contracts negotiated during the economic stabiliza tion period, which ended in April 1974; the average duration of these contracts is 30 months. The absence of Federal constraints that affected the previous wage settlements, and the earnings ero sion by inflation that has since occurred in many of the industries scheduled for bargaining point to sub stantial 1976 wage demands. However, demands could be tempered by the desire to avoid actions that might trigger more layoffs or a return to wage controls. The bulk of this year’s major collective bargaining will occur between March and September in eight key industries— construction, food, apparel, rubber, farm equipment, electrical equipment, automobiles, and trucking. Major apparel contracts have varying expiration dates— for 65,000 Ladies’ Garment Work ers, agreements expire in January for another 100,000 in May, and for 100,000 Clothing Workers in September. In March, three Teamster trucking agreements— two national and one local— covering 450,000 work ers, come up for renewal. These are followed by contract expirations at the four major rubber com panies (Goodyear, Firestone, B. F. Goodrich, and Uniroyal) in April. Also expiring in April are major construction industry contracts for 143,000 workers. May will witness even heavier bargaining in con struction, as 334,000 workers, nearly one-half of all those in the industry whose contracts come up for renegotiation in 1976, will be affected. At midyear, national agreements will terminate in the electrical machinery industry. Nine contracts be tween General Electric and various unions, repre senting 140,000 workers, expire in late June. Two weeks later, in July, seven agreements with Westinghouse covering 65,000 workers will terminate. August bargaining in the food industry will cover 46,000 meatpackers nationwide; contracts for an additional 9,000 Meat Cutters will run out by the end of the year. If prior years are an indication, bar gaining in the industry will center on one of the three largest meatpacking companies—Armour, Swift, or Wilson. September will be the heaviest month of bargain ing in 1976. Contracts between the “Big Three” auto manufacturers and the Auto Workers (UAW) expire on September 14; and for the first time in recent years the American Motors’ contract expiration will coincide with those of General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler. In total, these negotiations will encompass approximately 725,000 workers. At the end of Sep tember, contracts covering 95,000 UAW members expire with the three major manufacturers of farm and construction equipment (International Har vester, Deere, and Caterpillar). Table 1 presents contract expiration data for major bargaining units by month and by principal industry affected, while table 2 presents this information by year and industry. Bargaining in 1976 will be influenced by the degree to which wage gains under expiring contracts were reduced by price increases. The BLS Consumer Price Index, for example, rose 8.8 percent in 1973, 12.2 percent in 1974, and at a 7.1 percent annual rate in the first 10 months of 1975. The following tabulation presents the average annual percentage wage adjustment in major con- (W orkers in th ou san d s) C o ntract e x p ira tio n s1 Sch e d u le d wage 2 reopenings Principal ind ustry Y e ar and m on th Num ber W o rk e rs covered N um ber W o rk e rs covered A ll years .................................... 2,2 5 5 10,141 95 326 Total, 1 9 7 6 .................................... 880 4 ,2 1 0 64 184 ............................................ 33 128 5 24 Apparel; services .............................. M arch .................................................... T r u c k i n g ............................................ A p r i l ...................................................... C o n stru c tio n ; r u b b e r ......................... 34 91 4 12 75 137 670 5 15 422 22 24 40 Janua ry ................................................ F e b ruary .............................................. A pp are l May ..................................................... C o n stru c tio n ; apparel ......................... 170 589 June ..................................................... Electrical e quipm ent; fo o d ............... 12 4 552 6 12 14 Ju ly ..................................................... Electrical e q u ip m e n t ........................... 73 51 67 221 5 22 11 6 1,0 6 0 3 3 8 4 Septem ber ............................................ O ctohe r .... ................................ N o ve m b e r ........................... Decem ber ............................................ Total 1 9 7 7 May June 41 105 4 6 ............................................ 40 11 8 2 4 Electrical equipm ent; fo o d s t o r e s ........ 35 13 8 1 2 897 4 ,3 8 0 26 99 3 .................................... 59 1 45 1 39 1 56 1 2 .................................................... Stone, clay, and glass p ro ducts ........... 85 273 7 22 .................................................... ................................................ F e b ruary A p ril F o o d s t o r e s ........................................ Services .......... January M arch F o o d (m eatpacking) ........................... M o t o r vehicle and farm e quip m ent . . . . .............................................. Petroleum refining ............................ F o o d stores; fabricated metals C o n s t r u c t i o n ........... ......................... 123 284 2 11 ...................................................... Apparel; co n stru ctio n ; lum ber ........... ............................... C o n stru c tio n ; cop per ......................... 115 460 6 128 494 3 20 11 M in in g ; retail trade ............................. 52 152 J u ly ..................................................... A u g u st .............................................. ....................... 12 3 1,354 2 1 10 C o m m u n ic a tio n s; steel Septem ber ............................................ O ctob e r ................................................ M a r i t i m e ............................................ T ran sp o rta tio n e quip m e nt ................. 186 227 2 1 15 2 N ovem b er ............................................ M in in g 61 59 17 Decem ber ............................................ R a ilro ad s 36 473 278 920 4 34 ..................................... 234 721 4 34 ...................................... 44 200 1 9 Total, 1 9 7 8 Janua ry-Ju n e Ju ly-D e ce m b e r 1 9 7 9 or later .............................................. ........................................ .................................... ...................................... .................................... .................................. C o n stru c tio n F o o d stores 4 177 Hotels; restaurants ............................. 11 82 R ailroads; airlines ............................. 189 550 Y e ar u n k n o w n or in n e go tia tio n 3 .................................. E ig h t a g re e m e n ts c o v e r in g 3 9 , 5 0 0 w o r k e r s are e x c lu d e d s in c e t h e y h a ve n o f ix e d e x p ir a t io n o r r e o p e n in g date. 2 E x c lu d e s 2 5 4 , 5 0 0 w o r k e r s , 2 1 8 , 5 0 0 in th e la d ie s 'a p p a re l in d u s t r y , w h o s e c o n t r a c t s p r o v id e fo r p o s s ib le w a g e re o p e n e rs d u r in g th e year, b a se d o n in c re a se s in th e C o n s u m e r P rice In d e x . 3 B a r g a in in g u n it s f o r w h ic h the n e c e ss a ry in f o r m a t io n w a s n o t a v a ila b le in c lu d e 1 3 6 a g re e m e n ts w h ic h e x p ire d p rio r to N o v e m b e r 1, 1 9 7 5 ( w h e n d ata f o r t h is a rtic le w e re t a b u la t e d ) c o v e r in g 4 1 0 , 0 0 0 w o rk e r s , a n d 5 3 c o n t r a c t s w h ic h e x p ire b e tw e e n N o v e m b e r 1, a n d D e c e m b e r 3 1 , 1 9 7 5 , c o v e r in g NOTE: O n ly 1 4 0 , 0 0 0 w o rk e r s . b a r g a in in g u n it s in th e p riva te , n o n a g r ic u lt u r a l e c o n o m y a ffe c tin g 1 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o re are c o n s id e r e d in t h is table. B e c a u s e o f r o u n d in g , s u m s o f in d iv id u a l it e m s m a y n o t e q u a l to ta ls. (W orkers in th ou san d s) Y e a r o f contract term inatio n T otal S c h e d u le d wage 2 reopening 1 1 9 7 9 or U n k n o w n or 1977 1976 . . 3 later in negotiation W o rk W o rk W o rk W o rk W o rk W o rk W o rk W o rk Con Con Con Con Con ers Con Con ers ers ers ers ers ers Con ers tracts c o v tracts c o v tracts c o v tracts c o v tracts c o v tracts c o v tracts c o v tracts co v 1977 1976 In d u stry ered ered ered ered ered ered ered ered .......... 2,2 5 5 10,141 8 8 0 4 ,2 1 0 8 9 7 4 ,3 8 0 278 920 11 82 189 550 64 18 4 26 99 ............ 1,118 4 ,5 4 9 4 0 9 2,257 4 9 8 1,808 11 4 285 4 9 93 191 29 55 8 16 A ll industries M a n u factu rin g 1978 .. 17 38 4 F o o d and kindred p ro d u c ts . 132 371 183 - O rd n an ce and accessories 8 3 11 4 10 _ _ 6 9 _ _ _ _ 58 13 4 12 28 - - 14 26 9 14 2 3 - ... 8 28 48 - 8 28 ........ 21 51 10 21 5 12 1 7 - - 5 10 - - - 58 539 37 350 8 122 6 36 - - 7 32 1 2 - except fu rn itu re .......... F urnitu re and fixtu re s 24 84 6 2 - - - - - 8 3 3 - - 1 1 1 1 1 - Paper and allied p ro d u c ts Printing, pu b lish in g, and 77 125 9 37 16 4 2 27 9 15 73 17 54 30 55 4 6 - - 6 10 4 6 - - ........... 38 71 18 35 9 14 2 2 4 9 5 11 1 1 - C hem icals and allied pro d u cts ................... 58 116 29 54 17 37 4 11 - - 8 14 6 13 2 27 52 1 1 26 51 - - - - - - - - - 23 105 17 98 5 7 - - - - 1 1 1 1 - 19 62 7 32 10 27 1 2 - - 1 2 - - - T o b a c c o m an u fa ctu rin g Te x tile mill p ro d u cts A pp are l and other finished pro du cts ..................... L u m b e r and w o o d products, allied p ro d u c ts .. 1 8 Petroleum refining and related in d u s t r i e s ......... R u b b e r and m iscellaneous plastics p r o d u c t s .......... Leather and leather p ro du cts ..................... S to n e ,c la y,a n d glass 39 96 19 60 10 20 - - 1 1 - - - - 13 0 633 9 17 15 Prim ary metal industries . . . 32 98 579 13 19 - - 2 3 1 4 1 2 Fabricated metal p ro d u c ts . . 52 112 14 23 25 72 7 9 - - 6 8 1 3 - - M a c h in e r y e x c e p t ele c tric al • 11 2 310 34 158 59 120 12 21 _ _ 7 12 2 2 2 2 122 p ro d u cts ................... Electrical m achinery, e q u ip ment, and supplies .... T ra n sp o rta tio n e qu ip m e n t .. 525 68 340 37 149 11 20 - - - - 804 52 223 20 86 - - 16 26 1 31 6 12 1 115 1,139 - - - - 19 40 8 10 7 22 1 1 - - 3 7 1 7 - 10 23 5 16 2 3 1 2 - - 2 2 - - - 3 9 9 2,572 16 4 636 7 72 96 359 35 130 18 Instrum e n ts and related p ro d u c ts ..................... M iscellaneous m an u fa ctu rin g industries ..................... N o n m a n u fa c tu rin g .... 1,137 5 ,5 9 2 471 1,953 83 M in in g , crude petroleum , and natural gas p ro d u c tio n .. C o n stru c tio n .................... 171 1 2 12 16 6 2 4 - - - - - - - - 5 4 4 1,683 251 692 180 638 97 308 1 8 15 38 19 54 12 50 - 15 T ran sp o rta tio n , except rail ........ 74 755 38 592 23 110 5 27 - - 8 26 - - - R a ilro a d s ......................... A irlin e s ............................. 18 488 2 3 11 397 - - - - 5 88 - - - - 42 158 9 23 15 50 - - - - 18 85 1 2 - - 46 77 768 9 28 32 725 3 12 _ _ 2 3 1 3 250 29 85 25 81 3 36 — 20 48 — — roads and airlines C o m m u n ic a tio n s ............. Utilities, gas and electric ... — _ 5 _ 34 Table 2. Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry— Continued (W orke rs in th ou san d s) Scheduled wage reopening2 Year of contract termination 1979 or later Unknown or 1977 1976 . 3 in negotiation Work Work W ork Work W ork Work W ork Work Con Con C on ers Con ers Con Con ers ers ers ers ers ers Con Con tracts cov tracts cov tracts cov tracts cov tracts cov tracts cov tracts cov tracts cov ered ered ered ered ered ered ered ered 1977 1976 Industry W holesale t r a d e .......... 1978 31 76 12 44 13 21 3 7 162 713 66 245 57 265 31 187 30 100 10 32 6 20, 7 22 5 1 1 8 16 8 3 1 25 10 4 1 18 4 4 12 1 2 3 Retail trade, except r e s t a u r a n t s ........... R e s t a u r a n t s ............... 3 17 Finance, insurance, and real estate ........... 15 83 5 33 4 31 2 4 4 15 Service, except hotels. . H o t e l s ....................... 61 22 235 30 134 44 7 14 1 18 7 24 11 2 9 42 16 5 25 4 14 2 29 2 2 See See See table 1, fo o tn o te 1, fo r table 1, fo o tn o te 2, fo r table 1, fo o tn o te 3, fo r notes o n data lim itations. notes on data lim itations. notes on data lim itations. tracts expiring in 1976—reflecting fixed amounts agreed upon at the bargaining table and then includ ing subsequent cost-of-living escalator adjustments.1 A ll con tracts . . C on tracts w ith escalator clau ses . . C ontracts w ith ou t escalator clau ses . . N e g o tia te d ch an ge N e g o tia te d ch a n g e p lu s a d ju s tm e n ts 5 .8 1A 5 .2 7 .9 6 .6 6 .6 It is evident that workers under contracts with escalator clauses have, on the average, fared better than those under contracts without such provisions. Nevertheless, even with escalators, many wage in creases have not kept pace with price increases.2 It should be remembered that considerations such as frequency of reviews and the presence of “caps” or limits in some clauses cause wide variations in the amounts received under cost-of-living adjust ment provisions. For example, workers in the auto mobile (and related) industries and m eatpacking industries, who are under “non-capped” escalator clauses, were able to keep up somewhat better with inflationary pressures since the signing of their con tracts in 1973. However, workers in the trucking and electrical equipment industries, who come under “capped” escalator clauses, have witnessed some decline in purchasing power during this period. In 4 N O T E : O n ly bargaining units in the private, no nagricultural e co n o m y affecting 1 ,0 0 0 w ork e rs or m ore are conside re d in this table. Because of ro u n d in g, sum s of individual item s m ay no t equal totals. the rubber industry, where workers are not covered by escalator clauses, real wages have dropped con siderably. The settlement patterns of major bargaining situa tions are outlined briefly in the following sections. Trucking National negotiations will take place between Trucking Employers, Inc., and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehouse men and Helpers of America (Ind.) over terms cov ering over-the-road and local cartage drivers. Supple mental provisions are negotiated on a regional basis. In 1970, the Independent Chicago Truck Drivers and several Teamsters locals in the Chicago area settled after the national Teamster accord and obtained superior terms, which prompted the Teamsters to reopen their contracts with Trucking Employers, Inc. In 1973, however, the Chicago drivers’ contracts were extended to coincide with the national agree ments, and the settlements were similar. 1 The full impact of these adjustments is not yet reflected in these data, as some contracts expiring in 197 6 have addi tional reviews scheduled under present contracts. The data reflect adjustments made through October 1975. 2 Since contracts expiring in 197 6 were last negotiatedat various times, a direct comparison on an aggregate basis with the Consumer Price Index is not possible, as there is no one point of reference. The 1973 truckdrivers’ agreements include costof-living clauses, but they permit adjustments only to a specified maximum— 11 cents per hour annu ally; consequently, the truckers’ earnings have failed to keep pace with inflation. The Federal 55-mileper-hour speed limit has adversely affected earnings of over-the-road truckdrivers paid on a mileage basis, while employers have been squeezed by greatly increased fuel costs and continued competition from railroads, barges, and other forms of shipping. There have been only five major strikes in the industry since 1958. The more recent, occurring in 1970, involved “selective” walkouts over the terms of the Chicago area agreements. bargaining will be given to spreading the work through reducing hours of work, with no reduction in pay. The demand, which has not been a major issue for many years, is reported to be getting con siderable support from UAW members. There have been 40 major work stoppages in the industry during 1960-73, involving 10,000 workers or more. The 1970 strike against General Motors was the longest (134 days) and accounted for over a quarter of all strike idleness during that year. The September 1973 settlement at Chrysler ended a 9-day national walkout. General Motors settled in Novem ber, narrowly averting a strike of 20 key plants. Rubber Automobile manufacturing Agreements between the Big Three automakers— General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., and Chrys ler Corp.— and 700,000 members of the United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW, Ind.) are scheduled to expire in September. For the first time in recent years, the American Motors Corp. agreement, cover ing 10,000 workers, will expire simultaneously. The industry has been among those hit hardest by the recession, because of public resistance to rising auto prices and a shift to smaller, often imported vehicles. Although the earnings of those still working have kept pace with inflation better than in many other industries, temporary or indefinite layoffs involved more than 200,000 workers at the peak in January 1975 and have declined slowly. The heavy layoffs have depleted the negotiated Supplementary Unem ployment Benefit Funds at Chrysler and General Motors, and the union petitioned for and obtained relief for many of its Chrysler members under the 1974 Trade Act, which provides compensation to workers for loss of jobs from imported goods. Union negotiations with the automakers have followed a consistent pattern. The union, while bar gaining simultaneously with all three major concerns, selects one as a “target” to strike if no settlement is reached by expiration time. The other companies are permitted to continue production, thus putting pressure on the struck company to settle. The terms obtained from the target company usually are ac cepted, with some modifications, by the other auto firms. Although the big auto agreements are not sched uled to end until September, the UAW has already informed company executives that top priority in About 98,000 rubber industry workers are cov ered by 17 major agreements expiring during 1976. The “Big Four” contracts (Firestone Tire and Rub ber Co., B. F. Goodrich Co., Uniroyal, Inc., and Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.) which expire in April, account for almost three-fourths of the work ers. The past bargaining structure in rubber has been similar to that of the automobile industry, with the United Rubber Workers (URW) selecting a target “Big Four” company to set the pattern for settle ments with the other companies. Goodyear was settled first in the last three rounds of negotiations. Workers at Goodrich, however, refused to accept the 1973 Goodyear terms and a 3V2-week strike re sulted. Since the last negotiations, union and com pany representatives have been attempting to develop an industrywide bargaining structure. Because a major part of the industry’s output con sists of tires for new passenger cars, it has been hard hit by declining auto production. Unlike wage settlements in the automobile industry and many others, the 1973 rubber agreements made no provi sion for cost-of-living adjustments. Since then, rub ber industry wages, formerly about on a par with those in the auto industry, have fallen behind. Per haps significantly, in mid-1975 URW President Peter Bommarito appointed two committees, one to study URW bargaining procedures and the other to study the union’s strike benefit program. Strikes have been numerous in the industry. There were 20 major stoppages (involving 10,000 workers or more) in the 1950-73 period. Of these, 13 occurred in the 1950’s, only 3 in the 1960’s, and 4 in the 1970’s. Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies Farm and construction machinery and equipment Contracts covering about 340,000 workers in the electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies indus try are scheduled to expire in 1976. Expiring in June are agreements covering 140,000 employees between’the General Electric Co. and various unions, primarily the International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers (IUE, A FL-C IO ), the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE, Ind.), and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM, A F L CIO). In July, agreements covering 65,000 workers expire at Westinghouse Electric Corp. Unions in volved are the IUE, the UE, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW, A F L CIO), and the Federation of Westinghouse Inde pendent Salaried Unions (Ind.). Other large agree ments expiring include General Motors Corp. and the IUE (25,000 workers) in September, and in December, RCA Corp. and the IBEW (17,500 workers) and Hughes Aircraft Corp. and the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (CJA, A FL-CIO ) (8,000 workers). Bargaining is more dispersed in this industry than in most other major industries scheduled for 1976 talks. A number of unions bargain with most of the larger firms. In 1966, the three unions representing most workers in the industry— IUE, UE, and IBEW— together with a number of other unions, established a coordinated bargaining committee to strengthen their bargaining positions. General Electric Co. has been the pattern setter for major portions of the industry. However, IUE agreements with electrical divisions of the automobile industry usually are pat terned after the Auto Workers’ agreements, and con tracts of Western Electric Co., largely IBEW, but including some with the Communications Workers of America (CWA, A FL-C IO ), have much in com mon with telephone agreements. The agreements with Western Electric, supplier of communications equip ment for the Bell System, do not expire until August 1977. Like the workers in the trucking industry, most workers in the electrical industry have “capped” costof-living clauses in their agreements, and their earnings have not kept pace with consumer price rises. At the same time, severe cutbacks in production and layoffs have resulted from the recession. Work stoppages have been frequent in this indus try. Employers often have been willing to accept protracted strikes rather than agree to large wage increases. During 1950—73, 31 major strikes occured, 19 of them during the 1966—73 period. Renegotiation of contracts between major farm and construction machinery and equipment manu facturers and the Auto Workers will begin about the same time as the automobile talks and will involve terms covering more than 100,000 workers. The International Harvester Co., Deere & Co., and Caterpillar Tractor Co. contracts expire in Sep tember, with the Massey-Ferguson, Inc., contract expiring in October and the Allis Chalmers Corp. agreement in November. However, not all major contracts with the Auto Workers expire next year. Contracts covering 7,000 workers at J. I. Case Co. and 2,000 at White Motor Corp. will remain in effect until June and April 1977, respectively. Sev eral other major agreements will be negotiated with other unions, especially the International Association of Machinists (IAM, A FL-C IO ). Deere, International Harvester, and MasseyFerguson are the largest farm equipment producers. They also manufacture related products, for exam ple, International Harvester, heavy-duty trucks; Allis Chalmers and Massey-Ferguson, construction equipment; and Deere, industrial equipment. Bargaining is conducted by the union with each individual company, although there is great similarity in all the settlements. Negotiations in this industry usually follow the pattern of the major automobile settlements and are generally not reached until after the signing of a national automobile contract.3 In general, the industry has been affected by the reces sion to a much smaller degree than the auto industry, and, in following the last auto settlement, workers have kept pace with the rises in prices. There have been five work stoppages involving 10,000 workers or more in the 10-year period from 1964 to 1973—Allis Chalmers in 1964, Deere in 1967, International Harvester in 1971 and 1973, and Caterpillar in 1973. Economic benefits were the major issues in each strike. Table 3 lists key provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, each affecting 5,000 workers or more, in various industries and in government. These agreements were chosen as representative of contract expirations, reopenings, deferred wage in creases, or cost-of-living reviews during 1976. Deere was the first to settle after Chrysler in the last round o f negotiations; International Harvester followed Ford; and Caterpillar followed General Motors. M A N U F A C T U R IN G 20 Food and kindred products: Armour and Co................... . Teamsters (Ind.)........................... 55,000 6.500 Meat Cutters................................. 6,000 5.000 Sugar Co's. Negotiating Committee (Hawaii) Swift & C o ....................................... Longshoremen's and Warehousemen’s Union (Ind.) Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union (Ind.) Meat Cutters................................ . 8.500 Wilson & Co., Inc............................. Meat Cutters................................ 8.000 Textile mill products: Dan River, Inc. (Danville, Va.)............. United Textile Workers................... 8,000 Ladies' Garment Workers. 8,650 Pineapple Co’s. (Hawaii)..................... United Knitwear Manufacturers League, Inc. (New York and New Jersey) 23 Apparel and other finished products: Atlantic Apparel Contractors Association, Inc. (Pennsylvania) Clothing Manufacturers Association of U.S.A. Ladies' Garment Workers. 25.000 100.000 Clothing Workers........... 100,000 Ladies' Garment Workers. 15.000 Infants’ and Children’s Coat Association, Inc. and Manufacturers of Snowsuits. Novelty Wear and Infants Coats, Inc. Ladies' Garment Workers.. 7,350 Los Angeles Coat and Suit Manufacturers Association (Los Angeles, Calif.) National Association of Blouse Manufac turers, Inc. (New York) New England Apparel Manufacturers' Association, Inc. (Fall River, Mass.) New York Coat and Suit Association Inc. Ladies’ Garment Workers. 6.000 Ladies’ Garment Workers. 7.500 Ladies’ Garment Workers. 5.500 Ladies’ Garment Workers. 30.000 Ladies’ Garment Workers. 5,200 Ladies’ Garment Workers 61.000 Paper and allied products: International Paper Co., Southern Kraft Div. West Coast Paper and Paper Converting Industry Paperworkers; and Electrical Workers (IBEW) Printing and Graphic Communication.. 10,600 Printing publishing, and allied industries: Chicago Lithographers Association (Chi cago, III.) Graphic Arts.. Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products: B. F. Goodrich Co............................ . Rubber Workers.. New York Raincoat Manufacturers A sso ciation, Inc. (New York) Popular Priced Dress Manufacturing Group, Inc.; Popular Priced Dress Contractors Association, Inc.; United Better Dress Manufacturers Association, Inc.; National Dress Man ufacturers Association Inc.; and Affili ated Dress Manufacturers, Inc. 27 7,150 Clothing Workers......... . Cotton Garment Manufacturers Associa tion and Outerwear Manufacturers A s sociation6 Greater Blouse, Skirt and Undergarment Association, Inc. 26 7,700 Teamsters (Ind.)........................... California Processors, Inc. (Northern California) Frozen Food Employers Association (California) John Morrell & Co............................. 22 Meat Cutters................................. 5.000 Sept. 1, 1973 to Aug. 31, 1976 July 1, 1973 to June 30,1976 May 1, 1973 to June 30, 1976 Sept. 1,1973 to Aug. 31, 1976 Feb. 16, 1974 to Jan. 31, 1976 Feb. 16. 1974 to Jan. 31, 1977 Sept. 1, 1973 to Aug. 31, 1976 Sept. 1, 1973 to Aug. 31, 1976 Semiannually, Jan. and July Semiannually, Jan. and July Feb. 1: 50 cents • Apr. 1:15 cents Semiannually, Jan. and July Semiannually, Jan. and July Apr. 3,1973 to Apr 3, 1976 REOPENING: Either party at any time by giving written notice July 16,1973 to July 31, 1976 June 25, 1973 to May 31, 1976 June 1, 1974 to May 30,1977 May 31- Sept. 2, 1975 to Sept 1. 1976 May 31: 27.5 cents (40hour workweek): 30.6 cents(36-hour workweek) Jan. 5 :10 cents June 1. 1973 to May 30 1976 REOPENING: If the cost of living changes June 1, 1973 to May 30, 1976 REOPENING: If the cost of living changes June 1, 1973 to May 30,1976 June 1, 1973 to May 31, 1976 July 16, 1973 to Feb. 8. 1976 June 1, 1973 to May 30, 1976 Aug. 1. 1973 to May 30, 1976 Feb. 1, 1973 to Jan. 1, 1976 June 1,1973 to May 31, 1977 June 1, 1972 to June 15,1976 5.000 May 1, 1974 to Apr. 30, 1976 10,500 May 31,1973 to Apr. 20,1976 June 1:10 percent6 Apr. 3 0 . 1967 S IC code Rubber Workers____________ ______ General Motors Corp.r Inland Manufac turing Div., (Dayton, Ohio) Goodyear Tire & Rubber C o ___________ Rubber Workers____ _______________ 23,750 Uniroyal Inc. Rubber Workers............... ............ 16,000 Interco, Inc.. 34 Em ploy ees covered Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.. Leather and leather products: Brown Shoe Co........ ....... 33 Union 2 Industry and e m p lo y e r1 Primary metal industries: Aluminum Co. of America. Rubber Workers___________ _____ ____ 17,450 5,000 Contract term and reopening p r o v is io n s 3 July 2, 1973 to Apr. 19, 1976 Dec. 10, 1973 to Sept. 14, 1976 Apr. 26, 1973 to Apr. 20, 1976 June 11, 1973 to Apr. 19, 1976 Boot and Shoe Workers; and United Shoe Workers . Boot and Shoe Workers; and United Shoe Workers 10,000 . Aluminum Workers....................... 10,500 Feb. 1, 1974 to May 31, 1977 Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly 9,600 July 15,1974 to July 15,1976 Oct. 1, 1974 to Sept. 30, 1976 10,800 Feb. 1, 1974 to May 31, 1977 Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp___ Steelworkers.... ............................ 12,000 Kaiser Steel Corp. (Fontana, Calif.) Steelworkers .......... .... ....... ........ 10 Coordinating Committee Steel Co.'s... Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc. Armco Steel Corp. Bethlehem Steel Corp. Inland Steel Co. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. National Steel Corp., Great Lakes Steel Div. (Michigan) Republic Steel Corp. United States Steel Corp. Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp. Steelworkers.......... ....................... 365.000 Feb. 1, 1974 to May 31, 1977 Aug. 1, 1974 to Aug. 1, 1977 May 1, 1974 to Aug. 1,1977 Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly Feb., thereafter quarterly Steelworkers.................................. 12,000 Feb. 15, 1974 to Feb. 14, 1977 Feb. 15, thereafter quarterly Feb. 15, 1974 to Feb. 15, thereafter quarterly Fabricated metal products: American Can C o.............................. Steelworkers................... .............. 17,000 Feb. 14, 1977 36 June 1: 10 cents Jan. 1: daywork oper ators, 20 cents Steelworkers....... .............. ........... 7,000 Machinery, except electrical: Caterpillar Tractor Co....... Auto Workers (Ind.)________________ _ 36,050 Deere & Co............... ..... Auto Workers (Ind.)_________________ 22,400 International Harvester Co.. Auto Workers (Ind.)........ ................ 36,500 Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.)............ 5,300 Electrical machinery, equipment, and sup plies: Allen Bradley Co. (Milwaukee, Wis.)___ General Electric C o.. Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.)............ 17,500 General Electric C o... Electrical Workers (IU E )................... 85,000 General Motors Corp.. Electrical Workers (IU E )............. ..... 25,000 GTE Automatic Electric Co. (Cook County, III.) Hughes Aircraft Co..... ...................... Electrical Workers (IBE W )................. 5,000 Carpenters ______________- _______ 8,000 RCA Corp.......... ............................. Electrical Workers (IU E )________ _____ 7,400 RCA Corp. Electrical Workers (IB E W )............... 17,500 Western Electric Co., Inc. (New Jersey, Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio) Westinghouse Electric C o rp ............. . Electrical Workers (IB E W )................. 30,250 Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.)............ 6,800 1976 p rov ision s for deferred wage in c re ase s5 Mar. and June. Aluminum Co. of America. Continental Can Co. 35 1976 pro v isio n s for automatic cost-ofliv in g re view 4 Oct. 1, 1973 to Sept. 30, 1976 Oct. 1, 1973 to Sept. 30,1976 Oct. 1, 1973 to Sept. 30,1976 June 25,1973 to July 24,1976 May 27, 19/3 to June 26,1976 May 28,1973 to June 27,1976 Nov. 26, 1973 to Sept. 14, 1976 Apr. 27, 1973 to Apr. 26,1976 Nov. 24, 1973 to Dec. 4, 1976 Nov. 19, 1973 to Nov. 30, 1977 REOPENING: Oct. 1 Dec. 1, 1973 to Dec. 1, 1976 Aug. 27, 1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 June 16,1973 to July 11, 1976 June 1:17 cents plus four-tenth (.4) cent — increment between job grades June 1: 17 cents plus four-tenth (.4) cent — increment between job grades June 7:17 to 26 cents Aug. 1: 16 to 28.4 cents Aug. 1: 16 to 28.8 cents - Feb. 15: 17 to 26.6 cents; $6.80 to $10.64 weekly employees Feb. 15:17 to 25.4 cents, $6.80 to $11.60 weekly employees Mar., June, and Sept. Mar. and June. Mar. and June. Mar. and June........ Mar., June, and Sept. June..................... June.................... Aug....... .... .......... Aug. 29:12 to 23 cents 371 372 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Electrical Workers (IU E )................ 33,000 Westinghouse Electric Corp Federation of Westinghouse Salaried Unions (Ind.) 13,600 Transportation equipment— motor vehicles: American Motors C o r p ....................... Auto Workers (Ind.) 10,000 Chrysler Corp., Engineering.................. Auto Workers (Ind.) 5,300 Chrysler Corp.................................... Auto Workers (Ind.) 115.000 Dana Corp........................................ Auto Workers (Ind.) 9,500 Ford Motor Co............................. ..... Auto Workers (Ind.) 170.000 General Motors Corp.......................... Auto Workers (Ind.) 420.000 Mack Truck, Inc................................ Auto Workers (Ind.), 8,000 Transportation equipment— aircraft: Boeing Co. (Washington, Kansas, and Florida) Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Lockheed Cali fornia Div. (California) McDonnell Douglas Corp. (St. Louis, Mo.). Rockwell International Corp., Aerospace and Electronics TRW, Inc. (Cleveland, Ohio)................. 373 38 Machinists. 26,700 Machinists. 15,000 Machinists. 11,300 Auto Workers (Ind.)......................... 11,500 Aircraft Workers Alliance, Inc. (Ind.).. 5,100 Transportation equipment— shipbuilding: Pacific Coast Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Firms Metal Trades Department; Teamsters (Ind.) Professional, scientific, and controlling in struments: Honeywell, Inc. (Minnesota)................ Teamsters (Ind.) 7,000 Clothing Workers. 5,800 Xerox Corp. (Rochester, N.Y.). 18,000 June 16, 1973 to July 11, 1976 June 16, 1973 to July 11, 1976 Sept. 16, 1974 to Sept. 15, 1976 Oct. 19, 1973 to Sept. 14, 1976 Sept. 23, 1973 to Sept. 14, 1976 Dec. 3, 1973 to Dec. 4, 1976 Nov. 19, 1973 to Sept. 14, 1976 Dec. 10, 1973 to Sept. 14, 1976 Oct. 21, 1973 to Oct. 20,1976 Mar. and June. Oct. 2,1974 to Oct. 3, 1977 Oct. 21, 1974 to Oct. 1, 1977 May 7 ,1975 to May 7, 1978 Nov. 17, 1974 to Oct. 1,1977 Nov. 1,1973 to Oct. 31,1976 Jan. 1, thereafter quarterly Jan., thereafter quarterly Feb. 2, thereafter quarterly Jan. 1, thereafter quarterly Mar., June, and Sept. July 1,1974 to June 26,1977 Jan., thereafter quarterly July 1 :50 cents Feb. 1,1974 to Jan. 31, 1977 REOPENING: Feb. 1. Mar. 18,1974 to Mar. 18,1977 Mar., thereafter quarterly Mar. 18:3 percent Dec. 6, 1974 to Dec. 6, 1977 Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly Nov. 6: $1.34 to $1.72 a day Jan. 1,1975 to Dec. 31, 1977 Jan. 1,1975 to Dec. 31, 1977 Jan. and July. Apr. 1: 3 percent Jan. and July. Apr. 1: 3 percent Jan. and July Apr. 1: 3 percent Jan. and July Apr. 1 :3 percent Mar. and June. Mar. and June. Mai. June, and Sept. Mar. and June. Mar. and June. Mar. and June- Oct. 2 :1 5 to 22 cents Oct. 2: 3 percent Feb. 2: 3 percent Oct. 3 :16 to 22 cents N O N M A N U F A C T U R IN G 12 40 Bituminous coal and lignite mining: Bituminous Coal Operators Association.. United Mine Workers (Ind.). 125,000 Railroads:5 Class 1 railroads: Operating unions. Locomotive Engineers (Ind.). 38,500 United Transportation Union. 130,000 Nonoperating unions: Nonshop craft...... Shop craft. 41 Local transit: Greyhound Lines, Inc. Trucking and warehousing: Local cartage, for hire, and private car riers agreement (Chicago, III.) National master freight agreement and supplements: Local cartage................ ............... Over-the-road. Maintenance of Way. 58.000 Railway Clerks........ 117,000 Jan. 1, 1975 to Dec. 31, 1977 Jan. 1, 1975 to Dec. 31, 1977 Jan. 1,1975 to Dec. 31, 1977 Jan. 1,1975 to Dec. 31,1977 Railway Signalmen.. 10,400 Machinists............. 18.000 Amalgamated Transit. 15,000 Nov. 1, 1974 to Oct. 31, 1977 Chicago Truck Drivers, Helpers and Warehouse Workers Union (Ind.) 10,000 July 1973 to Mar. 31,1976 Teamsters (Ind.) 300,000 Teamsters (Ind.) 100,000 July 1,1973 to Mar. 31, 1976 July 1, 1973 to Mar. 31,1976 Jan. and July. Apr. 1: 3 percent Jan. and July. Apr. 1: 3 percent Feb., thereafter quarterly for all divisions excluding Western which is Nov. Nov. 1:3 mills per mile5 Table 3. Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements— Continued [Collective bargaining agreements are listed below in order of the Standard Industrial Classification Code] United Parcel Service.......................... 44 Water transportation: New York Shipping Association (New York) Pacific Maritime Association8............... West Gulf Maritime Association, Inc. (Louisiana and Texas) 45 Transportation by air:6 United Air Lines, pilots........................ 48 Communication: American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Long Lines Dept. Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. (Wash., D.C., Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia) Illinois Bell Telephone Co. (Illinois and Indiana) Michigan Bell Telephone Co. (Michigan).. 49 13,200 Sept. 1,1973 to Apr. 30, 1976 Longshoremen's Association............ 12,500 Oct. 1 :60 cents Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union (Ind.) Longshoremen's Association............. 20,000 Oct. 1,1974 to Sept. 29, 1977 July 1,1975 to June 30,1978 Oct. 1,1974 to Sept. 30,1977 5,400 June 1,1974 to Dec. 31,1976 June 1 :4 percent Communications Workers.. 25,000 Aug.. Aug. 1: 3.3 percent* Communications Workers.. 33,650 July 18,1974 to Aug. 6,1977 July 18,1974 to Aug. 6,1977 Aug.. Aug. 1:3.3 percent* Electrical Workers (IB E W )............ 14.750 Aug. 1,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 Aug. 4, 1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 July 18,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 Aug. 4, 1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 Aug. 4, 1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 July 18, 1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 July 19,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 Aug. 16,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 Aug. 2, 1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 July 18,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 July 18,1974 to Aug. 6,1977 Aug.. Aug. 1: 3.3 percent* Aug.. Aug. 1: $1 to $9 weekly Aug.. Aug. 1: $0.50 to $9 Aug.. Aug. 1: $0.50 to $9.50 Aug.. Aug.. Aug. 1: $0.50 to $6.50 weekly Aug. 1:3.3 percent* Aug.. Aug. 1: 3.3 percent* July 18,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 July 18,1974 to Aug. 6, 1977 Air Line Pilots. 12,000 Communications Workers............. 12,300 Mountain States Telephone and Tele graph Co. New England Telephone and Telegraph Co. New England Telephone Co.................. Communications Workers............. 22,900 Electrical Workers (IB E W )............ 18,000 Electrical Workers (IB E W )............ 11,000 New York Telephone Co. and Empire City Subway Co. (Limited) (New York) New York Telephone Co. (Downstate New York and Connecticut) New York Telephone Co. traffic (New York and Connecticut) New York Telephone Co. (Upstate New York and Connecticut) Northwestern Bell Telephone Co........... Communications Workers............. 32.950 Union of Telephone Workers (Ind.). 61.950 Telephone Traffic Union (Ind.)...... 19.750 Telephone Traffic Union (Ind.)...... 5,650 Communications Workers............. 22,000 Pacific Telegraph and Telephone Co. and Bell Telephone of Nevada (California and Nevada) Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co......... Communications Workers............. 48,700 Communications Workers.. 60,000 Communications Workers.. 63.000 Utility Workers............... 18,450 Electrical Workers (IBEW ).. 14.950 Electric, gas, and sanitary services: Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. (New York) Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (California). Pennsylvania Power and Light Co. (Penn sylvania) Southern California Gas Co. (California). 53 Teamsters (Ind.) _ Retail trade -general merchandise: R. H. Macy and Co., Inc. (New York, N.Y.), Woodward & Lothrop, Inc. (Wash., D.C., Maryland, and Virginia) Retail trade— food stores: Denver Retail Grocers (Colorado).......... Industry Super Markets Grocery Division (St. Louis, Mo.) Retail Grocers Association (San Jose, Calif.) Retail trade— eating and drinking places: East Bay Restaurant Association, Inc. (Alameda County, Calif.) President’s Council of Food Beverage and Lodging Industries of Oregon (Port land, Oreg.) Employees Independent Association (Ind.) Utility Workers; and Chemical Workers. 5.000 Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union of Woodward & Lothrop Employees (Ind.) 7.500 Retail Clerks......................... 8.000 5,300 5.000 Retail Clerks......................... 7.000 Retail Clerks......................... 5,750 Hotel and Restaurant Employees 5.500 Hotel and Restaurant Employees 6.000 July 3 :6 0 cents Oct. 1:80.60 to $1.20 u fo o k lv u ie o k lu Aug.. Aug. 1:3.3 percent* Aug.. Aug. 1: 3.3 percent* Aug.. Aug. 1: 3.3 percent* Aug.. Aug. 1: $0.50 to $9 weekiy Aug. Aug. 1: 3.3 percent* Aug. Aug. 1: $0.50 to $12.50 weekly Mar. 2, 1975 to June 17, 1977 Jan. 1, 1974 to Dec. 30, 1976 REOPENING: Jan. 1 Aug. 3, 1974 to July 25, 1976 Apr. 1, 1974 to Mar. 31, 1976 May 2: 7.1 percent Oct. 31: 2 percent Apr. 1, 1974 to Jan. 30, 1976 July 1,1974 to June 30, 1976 Nov. 11, 1973 to Apr. 30,1976 May 5, 1974 to May 5,1976 Jan. 1, 1974 to Dec. 31,1976 Sept. 12,1973 to July 6,1977 REOPENING: July 6 Aug. 1, 1973 to July 31, 1976 Jan. and July. Jan. 4: 35 cents 1967 S IC code 65 U nion 2 Em ploy ees covered Rela (New Service Employees.......................... 10,000 Apr. 21, 1973 to Apr. 20, 1976 Rela (New Service Employees.......................... 13,000 Jan. 1, 1975 to Dec. 31, 1977 Hotel and Restaurant Employees........ 9,000 Hotel and Restaurant Employees........ 14,100 Hotel and Restaurant E m p lo ye e s....... 6,000 Hotel and Restaurant Employees........ 8,000 June 1, 1973 to May 31, 1976 Mar. 10, 1973 to Mar. 10, 1976 Jan. 1, 1974 to Dec. 31, 1976 Sept. 15, 1974 to Sept. 16, 1976 Service Employees.......................... 7,800 Mar. 1, 1973 to Feb. 29,1976 35,000 July 1, 1974 to June 30, 1976 605,000 July 21, 1975 to July 20, 1978 11,000 July 1, 1974 to June 30, 1976 Apr. 1, 1973 to Mar. 31, 1976 Apr. 1, 1973 to Mar. 31, 1976 Apr. 1, 1973 to Mar. 31, 1976 April. 1, 1973 to Mar. 31, 1976 Industry and employer 1 Real estate: Realty Advisory Board on Labor tions, Inc., apartment buildings York, N.Y.) Realty Advisory Board on Labor tions, Inc., commercial buildings York, N.Y.) Hotels, roominghouses, camps, and other lodging places: Hotel Industry (Hawaii).................. . Nevada Resort Association (Las Vegas, Nev.) San Mateo County Restaurant Hotel Owners Association (California) Southern Florida Hotel and Motel A sso ciation (Dade County, Fla.) Miscellaneous business services: Maintenance Contractor Agreement (Los Angeles, Calif.) 80 Medical and other health services: League of Voluntary Hospitals and Homes of New York (New York) Federal Government: United States Postal Service •............... 92 State government: New Jersey: Administrative and Clerical Services Unit New York: Administrative Services Unit............. Institutional Services Unit................. Professional, Scientific & Technical Services Unit Operational Services Unit.................. 93 Local government: California: Los Angeles County Clerical and Office Services Employees Repre sentation Unit Retail, Wholesale and Department Store American Postal Workers; National Association of Letter Carriers; Mail Handlers, Watchmen. Messengers and Group Leaders, Div. of Laborers; and National Rural Letter Carriers Association (Ind.) New Jersey Civil Service Association; New Jersey State Employees Association (Ind.) Civil Service Inc. (Ind.) Civil Service Inc. (Ind.) Civil Service Inc. (Ind.) Civil Service Inc. (Ind.) Employees Association, 29,000 Employees Association, 50,000 Employees Association, 36,000 Employees Association, 25,000 Contract term and reopening p ro v isio n s 3 Service Employees....................................... 19,000 July 1, 1975 to June 30, 1976 New York: New York City Transit Authority Unit 3.................... Transport Workers.......................... 30,500 Fire Department.............................. Fire Fighters.................................. 9,400 Board of Education (school aides)....... State .County and Municipal Employees 10,000 April 1, 1974 to Mar. 30, 1976 July 1,1974 to June 29, 1976 July 1,1974 to June 29, 1976 July 1, 1974 to June 29, 1976 Sept. 1, 1972 to Aug. 31, 1976 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Police De partment Pennsylvania: Philadelphia School Dis trict, Board of Education Fraternal Order of Police (Ind.).......... 8,100 Teachers....................................... 13,500 1 Geographical coverage of contracts is interstate unless specified. * Unions are affiliated with AFL-CIO, except where noted as independent (Ind.). 3 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 is the earliest date on which termination of the contract could be effective, except for special provisions for termination as in the case of dis agreement arising out of wage reopening. Many agreements provide for automatic renewal at the expiration date unless notice of termination is given. The Labor Manage 1976 p ro v isio n s for automatic cost-ofliv in g re view 4 Jan....................... 1976 p rov ision s for deferred wage in c re a se s5 Jan. 1: $15 to $17 weekly Jan. 1:15 to 35 cents Jan. 1: $1.25 daily May and Nov.......... Mar. 21: $250 and Nov. 21: $250 annually ment 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 expir ation date. 4 Date shown indicate the month in which adjustment is to be made, not the month of the Consumer Price Index on which adjustment is based. 5 Hourly rate increase unless otherwise specified. 5 Contract terms are not on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Information is based on newspaper accounts. S O U R C E : Contracts on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Oct. 1,1975. Where no contracts are on file, table entries are based on newspaper accounts. Scheduled wage increases and escalator provisions in 1976 Wage-rate increases negotiated in prior years are scheduled to go to 5.5 million private nonfarm workers under major collective bargaining agree ments (those covering 1,000 workers or m ore4) during 1976. The average increase will be 5.4 per cent, compared with the 5.1-percent average de ferred increase received by 6.7 million workers in 1975. More than 4.6 million of the 5.9 million workers under major contracts containing cost-of-living escalator clauses are scheduled to have at least one review— and possible pay raise— in 1976. In addi tion, at least 4.4 million workers are covered by contracts expiring or subject to renegotiation under wage reopeners in 1976, about 2 million more than in 1975. Key negotiations are expected in the auto mobile and farm equipment manufacturing indus tries (covering 820,000 workers), trucking (450,000 workers), electrical equipment manufacturing (205,000 w o r k e r s), rubber p ro d u cts m a n u fa ctu rin g (70,000 workers), and meatpacking (55,000 workers). As of early November 1975, the Bureau of Labor Statistics had information on 2,066 contracts cover ing 9.6 million of the 10.2 million workers under major collective bargaining agreements. This section is largely limited to data for these 9.6 million work ers. The remaining workers were covered by agree ments that expired later in 1975, were still being negotiated, or whose terms had not yet been released.5 4 These agreements include multiplant or multifirm agree ments covering 1,000 workers or more, even though indi vidual units may be smaller. Although approximately 1 American worker in 5 is a union member, only about 1 in 9 is included in an agreement covering 1,000 workers or more in the private nonfarm sector. Employment data pre sented are those available in November 1975. Cost-of-living escalators The third consecutive year of high inflation re inforced union efforts to obtain cost-of-living esca lator clauses. About 58 percent (5.9 million6) of all workers under major contracts in the private non farm sector are covered by such provisions, which provide for the periodic, automatic adjustment of wage rates according to movements in the Con sumer Price Index. Escalator clauses covering more than 600,000 workers were established in settle ments reached in 1975. (Nearly 1 million workers came under such provisions as a result of bargain ing concluded during 1974.) Most of the workers who came under escalator clauses in 1975 were represented by the Railway Clerks, United Transportation Union, Retail Clerks, “ Information was not available for 53 agreements that expired after Nov. 1, 1975, covering 140,000 workers; 108 contracts that expired earlier in the year but where negotiations were continuing, covering 323,000 workers; and 28 contracts whose status was unknown or where the terms of the new agreement were not available, covering 87,000 workers. 6 About 1.3 million workers under smaller union contracts and 72,000 workers in nonunion manufacturing plants were also covered by escalators. The 5.9 million workers include those under expired contracts containing such clauses, where agreements had not been renegotiated at the time the article was written. Additionally, about 600,000 postal employees will have their earnings adjusted in May and November according to increases in the Consumer Price Index. This discussion excludes 254,500 workers— 218,500 of them in the ladies’ apparel industry— whose contracts pro vided for possible wage reopeners based on increases in the Consumer Price Index. For an analysis of cost-of-living escalator provisions, see H. M. Douty, Cost-of-Living Escalator Clauses and Inflation (Council on Wage and Price Stability, 1975), summarized in “Does inflation ride escalators? N ot yet, pay council study finds,” M onthly Labor Review, November 1975, pp. 65-66. and Machinists. The following tabulation shows the union affiliation of workers covered by cost-of-living clauses: U n io n W o r k e rs c o v e r e d Auto Workers ................. 1,069,000 640,000 Steelworkers ........................ . . . . ; . . Teamsters.......................................... 630,000 590,000 Communications Workers .............. Machinists ........................................ 284,000 Retail Clerks .................................... 242,000 Electrical Workers (IBEW) ............ 200,000 Electrical Workers ( I U E ) ................ 174,000 157,000 Meat Cutters ............................ United Transportation U nion.......... 135,000 Railway Clerks ................................ 134,000 Mine W orkers...... ........................... 120,000 Clothing Workers ............................ 118,000 All o thers..................................... 1,441,000 Many workers are covered by national agree ments with major companies or with industry asso ciations; for example, the Auto Workers with Gen eral Motors, Fbrd, and Chrysler (covering 715,000 workers); the Steelworkers with the Steel Industry Coordinating Committee (350,000 workers); the Teamsters with Trucking Employers, Inc. (400,000 workers); and the Communications Workers with American Telephone & Telegraph Co. (500,000 workers). The proportion of workers covered by escalator provisions increased greatly in 1975 in three industries—railroads, retail food stores, and printing. Table 4 lists the proportion of workers covered by cost-of-living clauses in individual in dustries. One or more cost-of-living reviews are scheduled for 1976 for more than 4.6 of the 5.9 million work ers covered by escalator provisions. Most of the remaining 1.3 million workers are covered by agreemerits expiring in 1976 that do not have a review scheduled this year before contract expiration. Most prominent in this group are 511,000 workers in trucking and 228,000 in the electrical equipment industry. Table 5 shows the frequency of reviews, and the quarters for which they are scheduled, for con tracts expiring in 1976 and for those expiring in later years. Major fluctuations in quarterly totals of costof-living reviews are attributable to the timing of reviews in certain key industries. For example, the largest drop in quarterly reviews scheduled for con tracts expiring in 1976 is in the third quarter. This drop reflects the expiration of Auto Worker con tracts in the fall in the automobile and farm equip ment industries, reviews for these contracts being limited to the first two quarters. In the third quarter, however, for contracts expiring both in 1976 and in later years, the number of workers covered is slightly higher than in the second, partly because of 700.000 workers in the communications (telephone) industry whose annual review will occur in August. Only 1.5 million workers are under contracts that call for cost-of-living reviews in the fourth quarter of 1976. However, this total could rise substantially if new agreements in the auto industry call for the continuation of quarterly reviews. Of the 5.9 million workers currently covered by escalator provisions, 2.4 million (primarily in the transportation equipment and steel industries) are under quarterly reviews, and 2.5 million (mainly in communications, trucking, and electrical equip ment) are under annual reviews. An additional 824.000 workers (primarily in the railroad indus try) are under contracts calling for semiannual reviews. The remaining workers come under a variety of other provisions. Most cost-of-living adjustments are based on changes in specified monthly levels of the CPI, although contracts in the automobile industry use a 3-month average of a combined U.S.-Canadian consumer price index.7 About 90 percent of the workers are under contracts that use national CPI data; the other 10 percent come under contracts that specify city indexes. Most of the workers in this latter group are under contracts specifying the New York City, Los Angeles-Long Beach, or San Francisco-Oakland indexes. The most common base used is 1967=100, which applies to two and onehalf times as many workers as are covered by con tracts that specify the 1957-59 = 100 base. Virtually all agreements negotiated in 1975 that provided for escalator clauses called for the 1967 base year. The formula for calculating cost-of-living adjust ments affecting the largest number of workers (ap proximately 2.4 million) is 1 cent for each 0.3point change in the CPI. (Of these, 1.8 million workers are under formulas using the 1967 base year.) A 1-cent change for each 0.4-point change 7The Auto Workers formula employs a composite price index. The Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (United States City Average) pub lished by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (1967 = 100) is weighted by 9 and the Consumer Price Index published by Statistics Canada (1961 = 100), after being brought up to parity with the U.S. 1967 index, is weighted by 1. In addi tion, 1 cent of each quarterly adjustment is diverted to offset the cost of fringe benefits. in the CPI covers 1.2 million workers. (Included in this total are 400,000 railroad workers under agreements specifying this formula for all but the final adjustment, in July 1977, which will be 1 cent for each 0.3-point rise.) Another 270,000 workers come under formulas calling for 1 cent for each 0.3percent change in the CPI. About 2 million workers are under agreements that employ other formulas, including more than 700,000 workers in the tele phone industry who receive 50 cents a week plus 0.6 percent of their scheduled weekly wage for each full 1-percent rise in the CPI (1967 = 100) during the preceding 12 months. The factor that generally has the greatest overall effect on the size of cost-of-living adjustments is the presence or absence of “caps” or maximums in the formula. Approximately 2.1 million workers are currently under contracts with such ceilings, more Table 4. than one-half million more workers than in 1974. Most of this rise can be attributed to escalator pro visions in railroad industry contracts and other 1975 agreements with reestablished or first-time escalator provisions.8 Among contracts concluded in 1975 that continued escalator provisions, there was no significant movement to or from maximums. About 1.1 million workers are covered by escalator clauses that provide for a guaranteed minimum increase. Contracts covering 913,000 workers have both guaranteed minimums and maximum limits. As would be expected, escalator clauses are more common, and the proportion of workers covered by such provisions is higher, among long-term con* Railroad industry settlements concluded in 1959 and 1960 did not continue cost-of-living escalator provisions from previous agreements. Major collective bargaining contracts by industry, escalator clause, and number of workers covered [Workers in thousands] In d u stry 2 -digit A ll contracts Standard In d u s trial Num C la s s i fication W orkers ber of covered co n (S IC ) tracts Total................. Metal m ining.............. Anthracite mining......... Bituminous coal and lignite m ining.. ____ Building construction general contractors___ Construction other than building construction.. Construction-special trade contractors_____ Ordnance and accessories........... . Food and kindred products_____________ Tobacco manufacturers.. Textile mill products___ Apparel and other textile products______ Lumber and wood products_____________ Furniture and fixtures... Paper and allied products______ ____ Printing and publishing.. Chemicals and allied products_____________ Petroleum refining and related industries . .. Rubber and plastic products_____________ Leather and leather products_____________ Stone, clay, and glass products_____________ Primary metal industries______ _____ Contracts w ith escalator cla u se s W orkers covered Num ber of con tracts 10,181 2,263 5,920 860 58.1 10 11 49 2 13 1 48 2 12 1 96.9 100.0 12 120 1 120 1 100.0 15 741 208 41 12 5.5 16 472 119 77 19 16.3 17 470 217 56 16 12.0 19 38 17 25 11 66.1 132 8 24 199 26 13 49 7 5 53.7 94.6 22.4 539 58 117 5 21.6 84 27 24 17 20 21 22 371 28 59 23 24 25 7 4 26.8 1.3 64.4 31.8 26 27 125 71 77 38 2 46 1 18 28 122 60 39 18 29 52 27 30 105 23 4 1 4.3 31 62 19 8 2 13.4 32 96 39 79 28 83.0 33 633 130 601 116 94.9 Note: Because of rounding, sum s of individual items may not equal totals. P e r cent of w orkers covered by e s calator cla u se s Ind ustry Fabricated metal products____________ Machinery, except electrical._ ________ Electrical equipm ent... Transportation equip ment_______________ Instruments and related products____ Miscellaneous manu facturing industries.. Railroad transportation. Local and suburban transit ___________ Motor freight transpor tation __ _______ Water transportation... Transportation by air__ Commu nication...... . Electric, gas, and sani tary services........ . Wholesale trade Retail trade— general merchandise________ Food stores . . Automotivedealersand service stations_____ Apparel and accessory stores______________ Eating and drinking places......... .......... Miscellaneous retail stores______ ______ _ Finance, insurance, and real estate______ Services 2-digit A ll contracts Standard In d u s trial Num C la s s i ber of fication W orkers con covered (S IC ) tracts C ontracts w ith escalator cla u se s W orkers covered Num ber of co n tracts Per cent of w orkers covered by e s calator c la u se s 34 112 52 79 32 70.8 35 36 310 525 112 122 266 453 85 91 85.8 86.3 37 1,139 115 1,079 92 94.7 38 40 19 15 7 37.6 39 40 23 488 10 18 4 413 2 14 19.2 84.7 41 112 28 110 27 98.0 42 44 45 48 535 107 158 768 26 20 42 46 521 17 86 730 18 5 17 32 97.3 15.9 54.6 95.0 49 50 274 78 79 31 74 45 12 14 27.1 59.4 53 54 102 550 27 109 20 335 3 52 20.1 60.9 55 24 11 6 3 25.6 56 16 8 2 1 9.3 58 100 30 3 1 2.8 59 22 7 6 2 25.9 60-67 70-89 83 348 15 84 56 89 8 16 67.4 25.5 tracts, as union negotiators try to protect real wages from erosion caused by inflation in later years. The proportions of workers covered by escalators under 1- and 2-year agreements are 3 and 19 per cent, respectively. Of the 5.9 million workers cov ered by agreements containing cost-of-living clauses, 5.5 million are under 3-year agreements; they account for 74 percent of all workers under 3-year contracts.9 Deferred increases The number of workers receiving deferred in creases will drop by about 1.3 million workers from last year, because more workers will be covered by new agreements in 1976 than in 1975. The large number of workers under 3-year contracts has tended to create a cyclical trend in the number of employees receiving deferred increases, as the follow ing tabulation (in millions) indicates: W o r k e rs 1966 . . . ............ 1967 . . . ............ 1968 . . . ............ 1969 . . . ............ 1970 . . . ............ p = preliminary. Table 5. W o r k e rs 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 4.3 4.5 5.6 7.6 5.7 ... ... ... ... ... ... ............ 5.8 ............ 7.3 ............ 5.6 ............ 5.4 ............ p6.7 ............ '5.5 The average deferred increase for all industries in 1976 will be 5.4 percent, or 36.4 cents, as shown in table 6. Contracts negotiated in 1975 provided for an average 6.4-percent increase for 2.1 million workers in 1976; 3.4 million will receive a 4.8-per cent average increase as a result of 1974 settle ments. One reason for the disparity in size of the average increase under contracts negotiated in these 2 years is the “front-loading” of wage increases in long-term contracts— wage increases, on a per centage basis, generally decline considerably from the first to the second year of a contract and, to a lesser extent, from the second to the third. A secondary cause may be that some of the agreements reached during 1974 that provide for increases in 1976 were concluded while the Economic Stabilization Program was in effect. Deferred increases in 1976 will be appreciably higher in the nonmanufacturing sector than in manu facturing— 5.8 percent compared with 4.8 percent. In cents-per-hour terms, the averages for these two n For purposes of this bulletin, contracts lasting 6 and under 18 months are considered 1-year contracts; 18 and under 30 months, 2-year contracts; and 30 and under 42 months, 3-year contracts. Timing of cost-of-living reviews in major contracts expiring in 1976 and later years [Workers in thousands] F irst q u a rte r Second quarter T h ird quarter F ourth quarter F ull year 1 T ype of c o st-o f-liv in g review N um ber of contracts W orkers covered Num ber of contracts W orkers covered Num ber of contracts W orkers covered Num ber of contracts W orkers covered Num ber of contracts W orkers covered ALL CONTRACTS Quarterly------------- ------------------Semiannual...... ........................ Annual..................................... Other2 Total.............................. 343 70 23 2,281 632 133 333 27 51 2,265 110 266 307 59 72 1,421 590 897 289 26 16 1,326 106 63 436 3,046 411 2,640 438 2,908 331 1,494 68 36 5 972 158 8 55 7 8 949 28 44 20 18 2 93 89 6 3 4 109 1,138 70 1,021 40 188 3 4 275 34 18 1,309 474 125 278 20 43 1,316 82 222 287 41 70 1,328 502 891 286 26 16 1,322 106 63 327 1,908 341 1,620 398 2,720 328 1,491 357 111 162 48 678 2,305 794 1,358 176 4,633 68 43 15 12 138 972 186 58 21 1,236 289 68 147 36 540 1,334 609 1,300 155 3,397 C O N T R A C T S E X P IR IN G IN 197 6 3 Quarterly________________ ______ _ S e m ia n n u a l____ ______ _________ Annual ................. .... ............. Other2 Total......... ..................... C O N T R A C T S E X P IR IN G IN LATER YEARS Quarterly............ ..................... Semiannual............................... Annual..................................... ............ ................... Other2 Total.............................. 1 Contracts that have at least 1 review in the year. 3 Includes only those reviews through the termination of the present agreements; 2 Includes monthly, combinations of annual and quarterly, combinations of annual does not assume the continuation of existing reviews after contract expiration dates. and semiannual, other, and reviews dependent upon the levels of the Consumer Price Index. NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. industry relative to other major sectors of the economy. The deferred increases in construction are coun terbalanced, to a degree, by smaller wage increases scheduled in communications and railroads. Ap- broad sectors will be 43.1 and 26.4 cents, respec tively. A major influence in nonmanufacturing is the construction industry, where 928,000 workers will receive an average of 8.1 percent, or 74.8 cents1.0 If the influence of construction were excluded, the average deferred increase for nonmanufacturing would drop to 4.6 percent, or 30.6 cents. Deferred wage increases in construction will remain steady relative to 1975-—8.1 percent in 1976 and 8.0 per cent last year. This above-average deferred increase in construction should be considered in conjunction with the scarcity of cost-of-living clauses in the Table 6. 10 About 486,000 of these construction workers will receive deferred increases under settlements in which the parties agreed to a total wage and benefit package, with the ultimate allocation between wages and benefits subject to determina tion by the union. Because the final division was not known at the time this bulletin was written, the entire amount was treated as a wage increase. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1976, by major industry and size of increase [Workers in thousands] N o nm an ufa cturing M a n u fa c tu rin g A verage increase Total................. Num ber of co n tracts A ll p rivate non a g ri cultural in d u s trie s Total 1 Food and kindred prod ucts A pparel Paper and allied prod ucts S to n e , clay, and g la ss prod ucts C on tract con stru c tion Com W are housing, m un i cations, w hole sale gas, and Se rvice s and electric retail u tili trade ties M etal w orkin g T o t a l2 82 1,296 3,285 928 609 838 572 135 68 494 517 61 45 78 1,023 445 174 86 10 2 12 31 12 6 218 191 47 12 1 693 44 6 11 34 54 42 47 42 26 24 23 30 5 10 107 107 61 40 37 1 4 2 18 T ran s porta tion 1,179 5,481 2,196 153 260 53 Under 15 cents....... ..... 15 and under 20________ 20 and under 25........... 25 and under 30________ 30 and under 35........... 79 199 170 108 68 322 1,587 1,044 469 164 243 564 599 295 78 12 1 8 26 23 102 19 11 122 18 7 3 29 26 2 35 and 40 and 45 and 50 and 60 and 70 52 43 139 251 226 210 131 361 966 58 69 25 142 122 18 19 4 27 16 6 4 4 1 20 3 1 6 1 10 17 31 11 28 24 168 141 1Q6 219 844 24 8 14 142 672 13 19 92 5 26 11 16 25 36.4 26.0 55.0 22.6 26.4 23.5 33.6 21.7 37.8 30.5 43.1 36.2 20.1 27.5 14.5 21.3 36.0 (3) 36.0 40.8 28.4 27.4 37.2 25.0 22.8 22.0 32.9 21.7 43.1 27.9 65.2 26.4 74.8 78.7 74.1 70.0 39.3 22.6 119.0 21.5 22.1 20.6 45.9 18.6 36.2 37.0 35.3 35.0 31.9 26.9 32.2 22.5 1 96 18 7 3 29 19 10 320 731 42 56 43 154 1,299 160 257 314 32 48 36 87 149 37 410 21 27 2 34 704 1 5 10 19 9 69 113 131 4 2 21 15 18 2 55 20 5 10 14 306 286 154 111 242 109 132 86 81 169 20 68 14 2 6 27 21 21 7 6 90 53 30 16 43 39 10 3 4 18 5.5 5.2 8.2 5.3 3.7 3.5 6.5 3 .0 5.8 4.4 7.8 5.0 8.1 8.8 8.0 7.9 4.1 3.3 7.9 3.0 3.8 3.6 8.3 3.2 6.8 6.6 7.1 6.9 7.7 5.3 7.8 7.1 CENTS PER HOUR under 4 0 ________ under 45 ________ under 50. _ ____ under 60________ o v e r........ ....... Mean increase_________ With escalators____ Without escalators.. Median increase________ PERCENT4 Under 3 percent........ . 3 and under 4 __________ 4 and under 5 __________ 5 and under 6 .............. 6 and under 7 . ........ . 140 224 93 132 149 523 2,194 281 416 561 369 895 121 159 247 11 7 11 20 27 7 and under 8 __________ 8 and under 9 .............. 9 and under 10_________ 10 and under 11 ___ 11 and over. .. ____ 122 132 58 64 65 406 411 187 195 306 100 125 33 84 64 20 25 14 9 9 5.4 4.2 7.5 4.0 4.8 3.9 6.8 3.3 7.2 5.1 8.8 6.9 Mean increase__________ With escalators_____ Without escalators.. Median increase........... 14 135 2 1 4 24 10 4 5.2 6.4 4.4 6.0 6.8 (3) 6.8 9.3 1 Includes workers in the following industry groups for which separate data are not shown: Ordnance (26,000); tobacco (28,000); textiles (18,00); lumber (76,000); furniture (12,000); printing (25,000); chemicals (36,000); petroleum refining (51,000); rubber (6,000); leather (55,000); and instruments and miscellaneous manufacturing ( 21 ,000). 2 Includes 168,000 workers in mining and 35,000 in finance, insurance, and real estate for which separate data are not shown. 3 Industry contains too few escalator clauses to permit separate publication of data. 4 Percent of estimated straight-time average hourly earnings. 2 11 1 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 early November 1975, and thus may understate the number of workers receiving deferred wage increases, Only bar gaining units in the private nonagricultural economy covering 1,000 workers or more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. proximately 700,000 workers in the communica tions industry will receive a 3.3-percent increase in August; they will also have an annual cost-of-living adjustment during that month. About 400,000 workers in the railroad industry will receive a 3percent increase in April and cost-of-living adjust ments in January and July. In November, 120,000 bituminous coal miners will receive a 3-percent in crease, along with quarterly escalator reviews begin ning in February. About 2.2 million workers in the manufacturing sector will receive deferred increases in 1976. Ap proximately 420,000 workers under contracts nego tiated by the Steelworkers with the steel industry will receive increases ranging from 16 to 28.4 cents in August, in addition to quarterly cost-of-living reviews. Workers in the can, aluminum, and aero space industries will also receive deferred increases along with quarterly escalator reviews. In February, 34,000 workers represented by the Steelworkers in the can industry will receive deferred increases ranging from 17 to 25.4 cents; 61,000 workers (represented by various unions) in the aluminum industry will receive from 16 to 23.8 cents in June. In October, aerospace workers will get a 3-percent deferred increase. Workers in the lumber industry will receive a considerably larger increase, 65 cents, in June, but no cost-of-living adjustment. Table 7 gives the distribution of workers receiving deferred increases by month and principal industry. Table 7. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1976 in bargaining units covering 1,000 workers or more, by month (Workers in thousands] Prin cip al ind ustrie s affected T otal1.............. March....................... April......................... M ay.......................... June......................... Ju ly.......................... August...................... September................. October..................... November.................. December.................. Table 8. Workers receiving deferred wage and benefit increases in 1976 in bargaining units covering 5,000 work ers or more, by size of increase [Workers in thousands] A ve rage deferred wage and benefit increase as a percent of e xistin g wage and benefit expenditures All settlements providing deferred changes1 _ ______________ Under 3 percent 3 and under 4 percent 4 and under 5 percent 5 and under 6 percent 6 and under 7 percent 7 and under 8 percent 8 and under 9 percent 9 and under 10 percent 10 and under 11 percent 11 and under 12 percent 12 percent and over Mean increase (percent) Median increase (percent) W orkers covered 3,440 ____ ________ _____________ _________ __ - - - ____ ____________________ - - - ______ _____________ _____ - __ _______ ________ ,----------------- - ______ ___ - ______________ __ _____________ ________ _____ ________ ______________________________ _____ - - _________ _____________ _____ _______________ ____________________ - ____________ _____________ - _______ _________________________ 171 1,217 759 168 448 243 192 114 93 13 24 - _____________________________ - ______ ________________ 5.1 4.0 1 The total excludes those workers covered by contracts expiring in 1976 receiving a deferred benefit change only. Effective month January..................... February.................... that will expire during the year. About 237,000 workers are covered by agreements expiring after 1976 that do not provide for a scheduled wage increase this year; however, of these, 28,000 are under contracts providing for at least one cost-ofliving review during the year. Of those workers receiving deferred increases, 3.4 million will also be affected by cost-of-living reviews; these reviews will narrow, and may even offset, the difference between the 4.2-percent average deferred increase for work ers who are covered by escalator provisions and the 7.5-percent deferred increase for those who are not. In agreements covering 5,000 or more workers, the combined deferred wage and benefit increase will be 5.1 percent in 1976. (See table 8.) The average gain was 5.7 percent in 1975 and 6.2 per- Construction; apparel.................................. Food stores; fabricated metals; transportation equipment............................. ................ Food stores...................._........................ Railroads............................._................. Construction.......................... _................ Construction; lumber; aluminum _______ Construction; food s t o r e s ............... ........ Communications; steel... ....... ...................... Food s t o r e s ............... .......................... . Aerospace; transportation........... - ....... ....... M ining........................ .................... _....... Construction............... ............................... W orkers covered N O T E : Only bargaining units in the private, nonagricultural economy are con sidered in this table. Because of rounding, sum s o f individual items may not equal totals. 5,481 cent in 1974. The decline since 1974 is, in part, the result of the increasing number of workers in the larger bargaining units who are now under con tracts with cost-of-living escalator provisions. 569 267 286 724 442 825 565 1,441 252 342 256 110 1 This total is smaller than the sum of individual items because 604,000 workers listed will receive more than 1 increase. The total is based on data available as of early November 1975, and thus may understate the number of workers receiving deferred wage increases for the entire year. Of the 5.5 million workers receiving deferred in creases in 1976, 294,000 are also under contracts Effective wage changes Precise estimates of the total effective wage change for 1976 are impossible at this time because of the difficulty of predicting the rate of inflation and the economic climate that may prevail at the time of various contract negotiations. It is possible, however, to sketch the relative importance of the three sources of wage-rate change: Increases resulting from new settlements, from prior settlements, and from costof-living adjustments. Because of the large number of workers covered by agreements expiring in 1976 (compared with 1975), new settlements will undoubtedly play the largest role in determining the total effective wage change. The second strongest influence on this change will probably be wage increases scheduled for 1976 under contracts reached in earlier years, closely fol lowed in importance by increases under cost-of-living reviews. The rise in the number of workers covered by escalator provisions and the pickup in collective bargaining activity combine to create a much more unpredictable wage picture this year than in 1975, when the 6.7 million workers receiving deferred increases had a moderating effect. AGREE MENT NO . EXP. OATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS COOES 2 UNION UNIT SIC STATE 27 , 0 0 0 1,500 1,400 1,200 1 ,300 1,500 1,000 2,000 1,100 1,500 3,200 3,000 1,800 1,700 1 ,600 1,200 2,400 5,000 1 ,000 7,500 2,000 1 ,800 1,200 33, 400 23 28 20 33 78 78 78 38 33 25 28 53 54 54 48 58 54 20 20 53 36 23 ?7 23 3,200 2,000 1,700 120,350 37 36 49 00 21 23 10 93 93 93 21 63 64 54 34 14 14 35 50 00 95 54 21 33 14 21 00 23 33 80 134 121 155 127 192 163 531 500 151 119 500 305 155 15 5 346 14 5 155 480 531 33 2 218 134 243 134 11 2 218 127 20 23 .'3 20 20 23 28 53 49 20 20 73 42 23 39 33 22 27 23 23 28 23 27 28 r 56 49 20 27 41 33 43 00 21 22 31 21 62 23 95 93 43 93 00 21 00 35 00 14 21 10 22 21 21 31 21 93 00 00 22 53 53 1 13 4 3 32 155 13 5 13 4 5 00 184 127 108 53 1 11 B 5 31 13 4 146 218 337 243 134 134 35 7 134 243 5 CO 305 127 53 1 323 197 357 4 1 35 16 16 16 16 16 15 33 21 21 21 21 21 74 218 531 129 14 3 119 115 119 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 January 827 1643 375 2658 7983 7911 7916 4428 2632 1128 1632 6502 6802 6816 5718 7108 6732 262 3 78 6508 3748 830 1433 836 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 A F F I L I A T E D D R E S S M F R S INC + 2 O T H E R S 4 L US A M C Y A N A M I D C O L E D E R L E L A B S D I V L U 143 AM H O M E F O O D S INC L U 38 AM I N S U L A T E D W I R E C O R P + N E C A B L E C O R P A N I M A T E D FIL M P R O D U C E R S A S S N LU 839 A S S N O F M O T I O N P I C T U R E + TV P R O D U C E R S O F F I C E A S S N OF M O T I O N P I C T U R E ♦ TV P R O D U C E R S INC B U L O V A W A T C H C O INC C E N T R A L F O U N D R Y C O H O L T L 311 D E S O T O INC M P I I N D U S T R I E S D J A C K S O N L U 3 0 3 1 D U P O N T El DE N E M O U R S ♦ C O M A R T I N S V I L L E F E D E R A L S INC D E T R O I T L U 362 F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC B O S T O N L U 5 9 2 F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC L U 2 G ENL T E L E P H O N E CO OF W I S C O N S I N G O V E R N M E N T S E R V I C E S INC W A S H L U 4 7 3 I-A 1 N D E P M E A T M A R K E T S ST L O U I S L U 88 I- A P I N E A P P L E C O M P A N I E S F A C T O R Y ♦ P L A N T A T I O N S ITT G W A L T N E Y LU 8 2 2 M A C Y R H + C O INC M A C Y ' S N E W Y O R K L U 1 - S NATL U N I O N ELEC CORP EUREKA W I L L I A M S CO DIV NEEDLE TRADES EMPLRS ASSN 4 LUS P H O T O - E N G R A V E R S B D O F T R A D E UF NY INC POPULAR PRICE CONT R S ASSN + 1 OTH 5 LUS 4113 3641 6038 01 01 01 S U N S H I P B L D G + D R Y D O C K C O P ♦ M E E S L U 80 2 S U N B E A M C O R P S U N B E A M A P P L I A N C E CO D I V U T A H P O W E R ♦ L I G H T C O L U 57 Total: 27 a g r e e m e n t s ................... 2 1 l 4 2 2 2 4 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 1 3 3 1 4 1 2 2 2 1 4 4 1 F ebruary 401 813 6500 255 332 847 1690 6506 6095 392 311 7945 5282 849 4600 2618 620 1447 874 862 1613 860 1456 1681 6907 6077 264 1438 5022 2548 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 02 02 02 A N H E U S E R - B U S C H INC L U 6 A S S O C G A R M E N T I N D U S OF ST L O U I S D R E S S B R A N C H B L O O M I N G D A L E BROS NYC LU 3 C A M P B E L L S OUP CO C A M D E N L U P - 8 0 C A M P B E L L S O U P CO N A P O L E O N LU 146 C H I L D R E N S D R E S S C O T DR ♦ S P T S W R C O N T R S GR N Y C D U P O N T El DE N E M O U R S ♦ CO T E X T I L E F I B E R S D E P T GIMBEL BROTHERS PITTSBURGH LU 1407 H A W A I I A N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y INC L U 1 2 6 0 I -A B A K E R I E S L O S A N G E L E S L U S 31 ♦ 37 I-A B R E W E R I E S A N H E U S E R - B U S H + F A L S T A F F I-A M A I N T E N A N C E C O N TR L U 3 9 9 3 4 9 2 7 8 I- A S O C O N F V A R I O U S T A N K C A R L I N E C O S I N C U S A S S N OF J U V E N I L E A P P A R E L M F R S IN C J E W E L R Y M F R S A S S N INC L U 1 N Y NJ + C O N N L A C I S H CO C U D A H Y L 1 8 6 2 M U N S I N G W E A R INC 4 L U S NATL BLANK BOOK CO H O L Y O K E MASS LU 48-B N A T L H A N D E M B R O I D E R Y ♦ N O V E L T Y M F R S A S S N IN C N E W F N G A P P A R E L M F R S A S S N RI M A S S 4 L O C S NL I N D U S INC T I T A N I U M P I G M E N T D I V S A Y R E V I L L E P L E A T E R S S T I T C H E R S + E M B R O I D E R E R S A S S N INC P R I N T I N G I N D U S T R I E S O F M E T R O N Y INC L U 4 3 B P R O C T E R + G A M B L E CO R E T A I L A P P A R E L M E R C H A N T S A S S N L 340 SAN DIEGU GAS ♦ E L E C T R I C CO LU 465 S T O K E L Y - V A N C A M P INC W I S ♦ M I N N 4 L U S T I M E IN C L U 3 T R A N S P O R T OF N J 8 L U S U N I O N C A R B I D E C O R P F E R R O A L L O Y S D I V LU 3-89 Total: 30 a g r e e m e n t s 1,200 3,000 3,600 2 ,050 1,95 0 3,000 2,500 1,300 1,100 1,000 1,500 7,800 3,250 4,600 2,600 1,850 1 ,650 1,200 5,000 5,500 1,100 2,800 1,300 2,300 2,000 2,300 1 ,400 1,00 0 3,100 1,000 1 2 4 1 1 2 1 1 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 4 1 2 2 1 2 2 4 2 4 4 4 ................... . . 73, 8 50 1______________ March 3291 8709 8711 8470 8710 8716 8616 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 ADMIRAL A G C NY A G C OF AGC OF AGC OF A G C OF A G C OF CORP M I D W E S T MFG DIV LU 2063 S T A T E C H P T R INC 11 L O C A L S AM N Y S T A T E C H P T R 4 L U S AM N Y S T A T E C H P T R INC 20 L U S AM N Y S T A T E C H P T R 46 L U S AM NY S T A T E C H A P INC H V Y ♦ H W Y AM S A N A N T O N I O C H P T R L U 14 CONSTR 3,200 3,000 5,500 8,000 4,600 1,00 0 1,000 agree ment EXP. DATE COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1 NC. NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 17 15 15 37 56 17 15 33 42 42 42 42 49 16 27 15 33 26 35 36 31 20 42 42 42 42 42 20 42 42 42 42 42 42 17 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 35 54 32 28 28 14 52 44 44 39 17 42 41 48 17 70 35 37 17 49 59 59 59 63 21 40 40 93 93 33 33 23 00 16 21 32 00 90 42 71 21 22 50 50 00 00 00 93 93 30 33 00 50 50 OC 00 10 20 10 21 21 00 00 00 00 54 54 00 00 00 00 00 21 33 33 32 00 43 93 00 20 93 85 74 35 00 84 88 16 54 33 UNION UNIT M a r c h — Continued 8541 8733 8421 4097 6906 8517 8622 2559 5200 5221 5203 5248 6055 8846 1428 8768 2643 1283 3373 3790 2117 362 5211 5212 5213 5262 5214 260 5216 5219 5222 5273 5229 5244 8898 5276 5224 5215 5223 5225 5226 5233 5234 5235 5232 5228 5227 5265 5247 5264 5266 5263 3273 6853 2336 1650 1649 8334 6402 5412 5414 4615 8669 5275 5015 5782 8806 7515 3381 4134 8519 6029 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 A G C O F AM SO F L A C H P T R + 4 O T H S L U 7 A G C OF AM S O U T H F L O R I D A C H P T R 4 L U S A G C OF AM S O U T H F L O R I D A 3 D I S T C N C L S A L A B A M A D R Y D O C K 4- S H I P B U I L D I N G C O M O B I L E A S S O C M E N ' S W E A R R E T A I L E R S OF N Y L U 7 2 1 B L U R S AS S N OF K A N S A S C I T Y D I S T C O U N C I L 3 B L C R S A S S N OF K A N S A S C I T Y C A L I F M E T A L T R A D E S A S S N F O U N D R Y D I V L U 164 CAL I F T R U C K I N G ASSN 9 LUS C E N T R A L M O T O R F R E I G H T A S S N INC L O C A L 7 1 0 C E N T R A L M O T O R F R E I G H T A S S N IN C H W Y D R I V E R S C E N T R A L P E N N M O T O R C A R R I E R S C O N F E R E N C E INC CIN GAS ♦ ELEC CO-UN L I G H T - H E A T + P O W E R CO 1347 C O N N C O N S T I N D U S A S S N INC E D I T I O N B O O K B I N D E R S O F N Y INC L U 25 EMPLOYERS NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE EVANSVILLE ESCO CGRP FI6REB0ARC CORP 8 MILLS 9 LOCALS FMC CORP CRANE + EX C A V A T O R DIV CEDAR R A P I D S F R A N K L I N E L E C T R I C C O In C J A C K S O N V I L L E L U 1 0 0 0 F U L T O N C N T Y G L O V E M F R S INC ♦ B L O C K C U T M F R S G F N L F O O D S C O R P M A X W E L L H O U S E D I V H O B O K E N 56 I-A C A R O L I N A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L C I T Y C A R T A G E S U P I— A C A R O L I N A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L O - T - R S U P P A G M T I— A C E N T R A L S T A T E S A R E A O V E R - T H F - R O A D I— A C E N T R A L S T A T E S I R O N - S T E E L S P E C C O M M D A G M T I— A C E N T R A L S T A T E S A R E A LOC A L C A R T A G E I - A DR I EC F R U I T I N D U S T R Y F R E S N O 4- M A D E R A I- A H O U S E H O L D G O O D S + M O V I N G S T O R A G E 7 L U S I-A J O I N T A R E A C A R T A G E A G R E E M E N T I- A L O C A L C A R T A G E A G M T F O R H I R E ♦ PR I C A R R I E S 1-A MASTER RAIL-TRUCK FREIGHT AGREEMENT I-A M D - D C C I T Y P I C K U P 4- D E L I V E R Y S U P P A G M T I-A M D - D C O - T - R SUPP AG M T I— A N A T L C O N C R E T E 4- B L D G P R O D U C T S A G M T I- A N A T L M A S T E R F R E I G H T A G M T P H I L A + V I C I N I T Y I-A N E W E N G L A N D F R E I G H T S U P P A G M T I— A N J - N Y A R E A GF N L T R U C K I N G S U P P A G M T I— A N O N E W E N G L A N D G F N L F R E I G H T A G M T S U P P I- A NY S T A T E T E A M S T E R S F R E I G H T O I V O - T - R I— A NY S T A T E T E A M S T E R S F R E I G H T D I V L O C A L C A R T I— A S O C O N F L O C A L F R E I G H T F O R W A R D I N G P I C K U P I-A S O C O N F L O C A L F R E I G H T F O R W A R D I N G O F F E E S I-A SO C G N F L O C A L F R E I G H T F O R w A R O I N G G A R A G E I-A SO C O N F O - T - R M O T O R F R E I G H T S U P P A G M T I- A V A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L O - T - R S U P P A G M T I-A V A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L C I T Y P I C K U P 4 - D E L IVF R Y I- A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A O F F I C E S U P P I- A W E S T E R N S T A T E S T R U C K I N G M A I N T E N A N C E I- A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A L O C A L C A R T A G E S U P P I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A A U T O M O T I V E S H O P - T R U C K I- A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A O V E R T H E R O A D S U P P I N G E R S O L L - R A N C CG P A I N T E D P O S T LU 313 J E W E L C O S INC J E W E L F O O D S T O R E S M E L R O S E P A R K J C H N S - M A N V I L L E P R O D U C T S C O R P W A U K E G A N LU 60 L E V E R B R O T H E R S CO H A M M O N D 7 - 3 3 6 L E V E R B R O T H E R S CO M A S T E R I N T E R S T A T E L I M P U S Q U A R R I E S INC K A N S A S C I T Y 4 - V I C LUMBER ♦ MILL EMPLOYERS 8 C N TYS 5 LUS M A R I N E T O W I N G 4- T R A N S P E M P L R S A S S N O I L T A N K R S M A R I N E T O W I N G 4 TRANSP EM P L R S ASSN O P E R S TUG M A T T E L INC 3 L U S M E C H A N I C A L C O N T R S A S S N C F N E W M E X I C O IN C M E R C H A N T S F A S T M O T O R L I N E S INC M I L W A U K E E + S U B U R B A N T R A N S P O R T CORP L U 998 N A T L B R O A D C A S T I N G C O INC M A S T E R N E C A R C C K Y MT C H P T R D E N V E R I N S I D E W I R I N G L 68 NEVADA RESORT ASSN R E SORT HOTELS NEW B R I T A I N M A C H I N E D I V LU 1021 N O R F O L K S H I P B U I L D I N G 4- D R Y D O C K C O R P L U 6 8 4 P C C A C H I C A G O C H P T R D I S T C O U N C I L 14 P U G E T S O U N D P O W E R 4- L I G H T C O B E L L E V U E L U 77 1,000 8,500 15,000 2,000 1,000 1,100 5,800 2,500 2,800 2,000 6,500 9,900 1 ,650 2,500 1,400 8,000 1,000 2,400 1,100 1 ,000 1,200 1,050 6,700 6,350 40,000 25,000 120,000 2,000 2,000 2 ,400 10,000 3,500 4,000 1 ,000 1,200 10,500 1 ,600 38,000 1,700 12,000 8,000 20,000 1,500 2,500 10,500 1,400 1,300 14,300 3,200 43,900 7,600 26,500 1,600 1 ,000 1,000 1,050 3,200 1,600 1,000 1,000 2,000 2,000 1,100 1,000 1,150 1,300 1,700 14,100 1,100 1,000 7,300 1,350 91 115 14 3 11 9 32 0 332 164 119 161 53 1 531 53 1 531 127 11 5 243 143 5 00 527 553 553 305 155 531 531 53 1 531 531 531 531 53 1 54 2 531 531 531 14 3 531 53 1 53 1 531 531 53 1 53 1 531 531 531 53 1 531 531 218 531 531 531 347 542 121 357 121 600 53 1 321 321 333 17 0 500 19 7 352 12 7 145 218 112 164 127 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 4 4 1 1 2 1 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 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 1 4 4 2 2 2 4 2 1 1 4 2 2 4 4 2 1 AGREE MENT NO. EXP • DATE COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 5,300 1,600 1,100 1,100 1,800 1,250 1,200 4,200 2,800 2,200 1,600 605,050 49 54 38 49 42 27 26 42 42 26 41 93 10 21 23 93 53 93 23 00 90 23 10 0 15 5 218 127 531 323 244 531 531 5 27 531 4 4 4 4 4 1 2 2 2 4 1 2,600 2,500 2,200 1,050 12,000 2,000 2,000 1,500 2,850 3,500 1,800 1,400 1,600 3,000 1,000 1,000 2,150 1,700 1,750 2,100 2,000 2,500 3,000 4,000 1,500 1,650 1,200 1,400 7,100 3,200 5,000 3 ,050 1,150 1,550 4,350 2,800 1,000 2,000 1 ,600 8,000 1,600 1,050 17,450 2,900 1,000 1,950 2,050 10,500 23,750 1,200 1,200 1,400 5,000 2,650 8,000 1,200 1,500 80 15 15 15 15 17 115 15 15 15 15 15 17 15 26 26 73 15 20 37 15 15 17 16 26 17 15 15 42 27 20 36 17 36 26 16 16 16 22 34 29 30 54 16 49 48 30 30 27 20 36 36 15 54 15 73 93 70 50 71 31 72 72 00 59 59 34 59 00 14 40 35 35 21 31 91 16 31 21 21 21 12 21 93 31 33 33 33 22 31 42 35 50 23 21 54 16 74 00 16 23 23 32 00 00 23 23 33 33 50 84 59 91 11 8 143 11 9 119 129 1 19 143 119 143 119 129 129 143 11 5 143 231 231 33 2 11 9 531 553 143 143 119 143 231 11 5 115 119 218 243 155 127 170 12 7 10 0 168 531 129 202 218 500 333 155 119 127 346 333 333 243 531 218 127 1 19 184 143 118 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 4 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 4 4 2 2 2 1 1 4 4 4 2 4 4 4 4 2 2 4 1 3 3 2 3 UNION UNIT M a r c h — Continued 6050 6761 4402 6098 5260 1451 1291 5243 5242 1301 5029 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 S O U T H E R N C A L I F GAS CO LUS 48 3 855 S T O P ♦ S H O P C O S INC 5 L U S SUN CHEMICAL CORP KOLLSMAN INSTRUMENT CO DIV U GI C O R P H A R R I S B U R G - L A N C A S T E R - L E H I G H U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC N O C A L I F W A S H P O S T C O L U 35 WEST COAST ENVELOPE EMPLRS COUNCIL CALIF W E S T E R N PE N N M O TOR C A R R I E R S LOCAL C A R T A G E SUP WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIERS 0-T-R AGMT W E Y E R H A E U S E R CO 5 MI L L S 6 LUS Y E L L O W C A B C O OF P H I L A D E L P H I A Apr il 7931 8915 8621 8903 8830 8562 8689 8779 8881 8743 8656 8865 8770 8678 8931 1202 1203 7988 8797 246 4048 8634 8429 8568 8911 1204 8546 8929 8436 5205 1411 202 3775 8791 3651 1200 8932 8812 8682 602 2906 1808 1903 6706 8926 6020 5717 1906 1908 1418 230 3667 3668 8875 6779 8925 7968 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 A F F I L I A T E D H O S P I T A L S OF SAN F R A N LU 250 AGC ARKANSAS CHAP ARK ♦ OKLA 6 LOCALS AGC NE FLA C H PTR DIST CNCL A G C OF A M A R K A N S A S C H A P T E R L U 6 9 0 A G C O F A M A S S O C C O N T R S O F O H I O INC 4 L U S AGC OF AM B A T O N R O U G E L U 1098 A G C OF AM B A T O N R O U G E C H P T R L U 1177 AGC OF AM C H A T T A N O O G A C HPT 7 LUS AGC OF AM FL A W C O A S T C H P T R 3 L U S A G C OF AM F L A W E S T C O A S T C H P T R 7 L U S A G C O F AM I N C M I C H C H A P L U 3 2 4 A - B - C - D AGC OF AM NE F L O R I D A C H PTR L 67 3 ♦ 673 A B A G C O F E A S T T E N N INC C H A T T A N O O G A B R L U 8 4 6 A G C OF M A S S I N C ♦ 7 O T H S 9 L U S AGC OF N D A K O T A LU 580 AM C A N CO G R E E N BAY MIL L LU S 327 ♦ 213 AM C A N C O 6 P L A N T S L U S 1 4 8 2 1 7 2 2 4 1 1 0 4 A S S N O F T E L E P H O N E A N S W E R I N G S E R V I C E S INC L 7 8 0 A S S O C C O N T R S O F O H I O INC A S S O C P R O D U C E R S + P A C K E R S INC 4 L U S AVCO CORP AVCO LYCOMING DIV STRATFORD PLANT BL O G TRADES EM P L R S ASSN C L E V E D L U 310 B L D G T R A D E S EM P L R S ASSN + 1 O T H NYC VIC BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN WESTCHESTER ♦ PUTNAM B L D R S E X C H A N G E R O C H E S T E R NY INC B T E A D I V 4 3 5 B R O W N C O ♦ B R O W N - N E W H A M P S H I R E INC L U 75 B T E A OF W E S T C H E S T E R ♦ P U T N A M C O U N T I E S 7 L U S C A L I F C O N F O F M A S O N C O N T R S A S S N IN C L 1 3 2 0 22 C A R P E N T E R CONTRS ASSN ♦ 2 O T H E R S CLE V C A R T A G E E X C H A N G E O F C H I C A G O INC O T H E R S C H I C A G O L I T H O G R A P H E R S ASSN LU 245 C H I C A G O MEAT PAC K E R S ♦ W H O L E S A L E R S ASSN C I R C L E F I N D U S T R I E S INC L U 1 2 7 3 C L E V E P L U M B I N G C O N T R S A S S N L 55 C O L L I N S R A D I O CO 2 P L A N T S LU 1362 C O N S O L P A P E R S INC + C O N S O W E L D C O R P 9 L US C O N S T R C O N T R S C N C L OF W A S H D C L U 891 C O N T R A C T O R S ASS N OF E PA HVY ♦ H W Y 5 C N T Y S C O N T R S AS S N OF W E S T C H E S T E R ♦ P U T N A M C N T Y INC D A N R I V E R INC D A N V I L L E D I V LU 248 EMHART CORP BERLIN PLANT HARDWARE DIV EX X O N C ORP EXX O N CO USA DIV B A Y T O W N F I R E S T O N E TIRE + R U B B E R CO M A S T E R A G M T F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC L U 3 7 1 G E N L C O N T R S A S S N O F T H E L E H I G H V A L L E Y INC GENL PUBLIC U T I L T I E S CORP M E TRO EDISON CO 5 L G E N L T E L E P H O N E C O O F I N D INC G O O D R I C H BF C O 7 L U S G O O D Y E A R T I R E ♦ R U B B E R C O 15 L U S G R A P H I C AR T S A S S N O F D E L A W A R E V A L L E Y INC 14-L G R E A T E R P I TTS M ILK D E A L E R S ASSN L U 205 GTE A U T O M A T I C ELEC CO N O R T H L A K E D I S T 8 GTE AUTO M A T I C ELEC CO NORT H L A K E LU 713 I— A C A R P E N T E R S G E N L C O N T R A C T I N G A G M T I— A D E N V E R R E T A I L G R O C E R S L U 7 I- A G E N L C O N T R A C T I N G B U S I N E S S L U 3 0 1 I-A M A I N T E N A N C E C O N T R S KING C O U N T Y AGREE MENT NO . EXP. DATE COMPANY NUMBER OF WORKERS AND L O C A T I O N 1 COOES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Apr il — C o n t i n u e d 6737 1435 7969 226 342 1695 3374 2567 2652 8721 8722 8874 1419 1446 8454 7525 2665 7403 8462 8789 1646 6074 7409 3234 623 3710 1639 861 8461 8798 6093 3269 6097 5239 1912 5271 5278 5283 3624 8625 3266 8599 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 I— A M E A T D E P T E M P L O Y E E S G R E A T E R K A N S A S C I T Y 1,300 I- A P R I N T I N G I N D U S T R Y O F T W I N C I T I E S L U 2 2 9 1,700 I- A T E L E V I S I O N V I D E O T A P E A G M T ( S Y N D I C A T I O N ) 6,000 I-A W H O L E S A L E - R E T A I L M I L K A G R E E M E N T 1,000 IC E C R E A M C O U N C I L 13 C O S 1,250 KERR-MCGEE CORP GRANTS URANIUM OPER LU 2-708 1,000 L U F K I N I N D U S T R I E S IN C L U S 5 8 7 1 9 9 9 + 4 2 9 1,800 L Y N C H B U R G F N O R Y CO L Y N C H B U R G LU 2556 1,800 L Y N C H B U R G FNDRY CO R A D F O R D PLT LU 2969 1,100 M A S O N CONTRS ASSN C L E V E L A N D LU 5 2,200 M E C H C O N T R S ASSN OF C L E V E LU 120 1,500 M E C H A N I C A L C O N T R S A S S N R O C H E S T E R INC + 1 O T H 1,000 M E T R O L I T H O G R A P H E R S A S S N INC L U 1 4,000 M I L W AUKEE L I T H O G R A P H E R S ASSN MILWAUKEE L 277 1,600 N E G O T I A T I N G C O M M OF M I D D L E T E N N G E N L C O N T R S 1,000 NEV A D A RESORT ASSN DOWNTOWN HOTELS + C A S I N O S 3,600 N O AM R O Y A L T I E S INC W H E L A N D F O U N D R Y D I V 1,150 N O R T H W E S T E R N MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO LU 50C 1,600 O H I O C O N T R S A S S N A G C O F A M INC 2,500 OHIO CONTRS ASSN HVY + HWY C L E V E L A N D LU 436 2,000 PAR K E DAVIS + CO D E T R O I T A L L E N PARK R O C H E S T E R 1,000 P E OPLES GAS L I G H T + COK E CO C H I C A G O L 1 8 0 0 7 1,900 R E A L T Y A D V I S O R Y BD ON L A B O R R E L S 10,000 R E X N O R O INC W E S T M I L W A U K E E O P E R S L U 1 5 2 7 1,250 ROCK HILL P R I N T I N G + F I N I S H I N G CO LU 710 1,600 R O C K W E L L INTL C O R P C O L L I N S R A D I O G R O U P D A L L A S 1,300 R O H M + H A A S C O B R I S T O L L U 88 1,000 S C H I F F L I L A C E * E M B R O I D E R Y M F R S A S S N IN C 2,000 SOUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN + 1 OTH 1,500 S T E E L + I R O N C O N T R S A S S N + B T E A O F C L E V E 17 2,300 1,100 T A M P A E L E C T R I C C O L U 10 8 T E X T R O N INC F A F N I R B E A R I N G D I V L U 13 3 3,500 1,100 T O L E D O EDISON CO T O L E D O LU 245 1,500 T R U C K O W N E R S A S S N O F S E A T T L E IN C 1 7 4 U N I R O Y A L INC NATIONWIDE P + M 16,000 U N I T E D PARCEL SERV I C E C H I C A G O LU 705 3,500 1 ,600 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC N O + SO O H I O 50 L U S U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC 13,200 WAGNER ELECTRIC CORP ST L O U I S L U 1 1 0 4 3,000 2,400 WEST TENN CONSTR INDUS CO L L E C T I V E BARG GROUP 1,350 W H I T I N M A C H I N E W O R K S INC WHITINSVILLE W I S C O N S I N R O A D B U I L D E R S A S S N L U 13 9 4,000 Total: 99 a g r e e m e n t s ................... 3 0 7 , 3 5 0 54 27 78 20 20 28 35 33 33 17 17 17 27 27 15 70 33 63 16 16 28 49 65 35 22 36 28 23 15 16 49 35 49 42 30 42 42 42 36 15 35 16 40 41 00 33 33 85 74 54 54 31 31 21 20 35 62 88 62 35 00 31 34 33 21 35 57 74 23 22 34 31 59 16 31 91 00 33 31 00 43 62 14 35 155 243 162 531 531 12 1 10 0 335 335 115 1 70 170 243 243 119 145 335 163 53 1 531 357 118 11 8 335 337 347 314 202 14 3 116 127 553 127 53 1 333 531 53 1 53 1 347 11 9 335 129 86 63 34 34 34 34 34 34 90 90 88 15 10 00 35 35 00 71 16 21 21 21 33 23 33 600 60 0 100 11 6 143 129 531 11 9 1 19 531 53 1 143 14 3 119 116 119 174 127 127 134 1 18 118 116 134 12 9 3 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 4 4 2 1 1 4 1 2 2 2 4 4 1 2 4 1 4 4 4 2 1 4 ]______________ M ay 8409 8665 8693 8712 8416 8655 8823 8666 8631 8745 8908 8645 8404 8566 8658 8626 2345 6002 3643 871 7501 7500 8580 858 7420 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 + OTHE R S ARIZ A G C O F AM A L A B A M A C H P T R H + R R C O N S T A G M T A G C OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R + 1 O T H 3 L U S A G C CF A M D E T R O I T C H P T R I R O N W K R S L U 25 A G C O F AM D E T R O I T C H P T R + 1 O T H L U S 3 3 4 + 1 0 7 6 A G C OF A M D E T R O I T C H P T R L U 3 2 4 - A - B - C A G C OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R L U S 2 4 7 6 1 4 + 3 3 9 A G C O F AM D E T R O I T C H P T R A G C O F AM IN C O R E G O N + C O L U M B I A C H A P T 1 O T H A G C OF AM IN C O R E G O N C O L U M B I A C H A P T R S A G C O F AM N E V A D A C H A P + 2 O T H S L U 63 1 A G C O F A M RI C H P T R 3 L U S A G C O F M A S S INC + 2 O T H 20 L U S AGC OF OHI O C I N N DIV D I S T C O U N C I L A L L I E D C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L O Y E R S A S S N INC L U 8 A L L I E D C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L R S A S S N INC M I L W A U K E E AM S T A N D A R D INC L U 89 + 6 O T H S A R K A N S A S POW E R + L I G H T CO 3 LUS A R R O W - H A R T INC H A R T F O R D + D A N I E L S O N L U 1013 A S S N OF R A I N A P P A R E L C O N T R S INC L U S 10 20 A S S O C H O T E L S + M O T E L S INC M S T R R E S I D E N T A G M T A S S O C H O T E L S + M O T E L S IN C M S T R H O T E L A G M T ASSOC STEEL ERE C T O R S OF C H I C A G O LU 1 A T L A N T I C A P P A R E L C O N T R A C T O R S A S S N INC BL D G M A N A G E R S ASSN OF C H I C A G O L U 399 24,250 2,75 0 5,900 2,500 8,000 3,200 4,000 15,000 8,650 1,500 1,500 1,300 10,000 3,300 1,050 2,850 1,850 2,200 1,200 3,500 2,000 2,000 2,650 25,000 1,000 15 16 17 15 15 15 15 15 16 16 15 15 15 17 17 15 32 49 36 23 70 70 17 23 65 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT M a y — Continued 7407 307 8431 309 8744 1205 1119 6057 8774 8646 8567 8652 8482 8851 252 394 389 8843 8447 1112 604 1905 8799 8657 876 879 1693 8328 6016 6847 6733 8571 5209 7928 6303 8914 6331 6310 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 05 05 852 3279 1215 8583 1217 1219 6781 6796 1226 819 8540 8594 8848 8849 8455 8500 8824 8822 403 8507 8677 8434 8547 6850 8852 826 828 6801 829 8528 8533 8690 824 880 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 B L D G O W N E R S + M G R S A S S N O F SF L U S 8 7 ♦ 14 B R E W E R S B O A R D O F T R A D E INC BTEA WESTCH ♦ PUTNAM BLDG CONSTR C A L I F B R E W E R S A S S N + O T H E R S L U S 893 + 896 C A L U M E T B L D R S A S S N AG C 3 O T H IND + M I C H C H A M P I O N INTL CORP C H A M P I O N P A P E R S DIV L 305 C H I C A G O F U R N I T U R E M F R S A S S N L U 18 CONN LIGHT + POWER CO 2 LUS C O N S T R E M P L O Y E R S L A B O R R E L A T I O N S A S S N OF NY C O N S T R E M P L R S L A B R E L S A S S N OF N Y S T A T E IN C C O N S T R E M P L R S L A B R E L S A S S N - B T E A L U 12 C O N S T R EM P L R S OF THE H U D S O N V A L L E Y + 1 OTH C O N S T R I N D U S O F M A S S INC C O N S T R I N D U S T R Y A S S N O F W E S T E R N M A S S INC DEL MONTE C O R P PLTS 126 + 127 LUS 670 + 809 D E L M O N T E C O R P W H S E + P L T 12 2 T O P P E N I S H 7 6 0 D I A M O N D F R U I T G R O W E R S INC L U 6 7 0 E A S T E R N N Y C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L O Y E R S INC A L B A N Y E A S T E R N NY C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L R S INC EASTERN PRODUCTS CORP 3 PLANTS E R W I N M I L L S IN C D U R H A M L U 2 5 7 GE N L T I R E + R U B B E R CO O H I O ♦ T E X A S 9 + 312 G R E A T L A K E S F A B R I C A T O R S ♦ E R E C T O R S A S S N L U 25 GREAT LAKES FABRICATORS + ERECTORS ASSN G R E A T E R B L O U S E S K I R T ♦ U N D E R G A R M E N T A S S N INC GREATER BLOUSE SKIRT ♦ UNDERGARMENT ASSN H E R C U L E S IN C H O P E W E L L H C M E S T A K E M I N I N G CO L U 7044 H O U S T O N L I G H T I N G + P O W E R C O L U 66 I-A FO O D ST O R E S G I A N T A+P S A F E W A Y 1 5 7 - 2 3 3 - 2 7 8 I— A I N D S U P E R M A R K E T S G R O C E R Y D I V L U 6 5 5 I- A M I L L W R I G H T C O N V E Y O R + M A C H I N E E R E C T O R I— A N A T L M A S T E R A U T O M O B I L E T R A N S P O R T E R S A G M T I-A T W I N C I T Y H O S P I T A L S M I N N E A P O L I S - S T PAUL I-A W H O L E S A L E G R O C E R S CHA I N STORE + 1 OTH I L L R E G I O N A L I N S U L A T I O N C O N T R S A S S N L U 17 INDUS EMPLRS + DISTRIBUTORS ASSN CALIF INDUS EMPLRS AND DISTRIBUTORS ASSN CALIF I N F A N T S A N D C H I L D R E N S C O A T A S S N INC ♦ O T H IN G E R S O L L - R AND T O R R I N G T O N CO LU 1645 INTL P A P E R CO S O U T H E R N K R A F T D I V I N T E R S T A T E I R O N W O R K E R E M P L O Y E R S ASSN OF W E S T E R N PEN N L 3 K I M B E R L Y - C L A R K CORP N E ENAH MILL LU 482 K I M B E R L Y - C L A R K CORP N E E N A H FILTER PLT + MILL K R O G E R CO GA A LA + TENN LUS 1 063 ♦ 1657 K R O G E R CO LU 655 L O N G V I E W F I B R E C O L O N G V I E W M I L L L U 1 53 LOS A N G E L E S C O A T + SUIT M F R S ASS N M A S O N C O N T R S ASSN O F M I L W A U K E E + 1 OTH LU 8 M A S T E R B L D R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N PA M O N R O E V I L L E M A S T E R B L O R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N P A INC C O U N C 4 0 M A S T E R B L D R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N P A IN C 2 2 6 4 M A S T E R B U I L O E R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N P A INC M A S T E R B U I L D E R S A S S N W E S T E R N P A INC M E C H C O N T R S A S S N O F C E N T R A L O H I O IN C M E C H A N I C A L CON T R S ASSN OF W PENN PITTS M E M P H I S B A K E R Y E M P L R S A S S N M I S S + T E N N L U 14 9 M E T R O D E T R O I T P L U M B + M E C H C O N T R S A S S N L U 98 M E T R O D E T R O I T PLU M B ♦ M E C H C O N T R S ASS N LU 636 M I D AM RE G I O N A L B A R G A I N I N G ASS N M I D - A M R E G I O N A L B A R G A S S N L U 50 2 M I L G R A M FO O D S T O R E S M I S S O U R I K A N S A S LU 782 M I N N A R E A P L U M B I N G C O N T R S A S S N L U 15 N A T L A S S N O F B L O U S E M F R S INC L 2 3 - 2 5 + 10 N A T L S K I R T + S P O R T S W E A R A S S N INC L U S 2 3 - 2 5 NATL TEA CO S T A N D A R D G R O C E R Y DIV I S I O N NATL WOMENS NECKWEAR + SCARF ASSN N E C A OF D E T R O I T S O U T H E M I C H L U 58 N E C A ST L O U I S C H A P T L U 1 N E C A ST P A U L C H A P T E R L U 1 1 0 NY C O A T ♦ S U I T A S S N INC N Y NJ + C O N N 6 L U S N Y R A I N C O A T M F R S A S S N IN C 2,050 2,100 1,600 1,000 1,900 1,100 1,000 2,750 1,750 1,500 1,000 1,200 5,000 1,500 2,050 1,100 2,000 1,000 2,000 1,400 1,200 3,000 2,500 2,000 15,000 1,000 1,000 1,500 3,000 2,000 7,000 1,100 4,85 0 3,000 1,000 1 ,000 1,500 4,000 7,350 2,500 10,600 2,200 1,300 1,000 1,700 1,25 0 1,500 6,000 1,200 7,000 1,500 1,000 7,000 5,000 1,100 1*100 1,000 2,300 1,800 24,85 0 1,900 1 ,000 1,300 7,500 1,000 1,500 1,000 3,500 2,250 1,200 30,000 5,200 65 20 15 20 15 26 25 49 15 15 15 15 16 17 20 20 20 15 15 25 22 30 17 17 23 23 28 10 49 54 54 17 42 80 50 17 50 50 23 35 26 17 26 26 54 54 26 23 17 15 15 15 15 16 17 17 20 17 17 15 17 54 17 23 23 54 23 17 17 17 23 23 93 21 21 93 30 74 33 16 21 21 21 21 14 14 90 91 90 00 21 52 56 00 34 34 00 21 54 45 74 54 43 34 00 41 41 30 93 93 00 16 00 23 35 35 00 43 91 93 35 23 23 00 23 23 31 23 60 34 34 33 33 40 41 21 00 32 21 34 43 41 00 21 118 531 129 531 119 231 205 127 119 143 119 11 9 143 143 531 531 531 116 119 312 202 333 116 129 134 134 335 335 127 184 18 4 119 531 903 531 106 531 480 134 553 100 116 231 500 184 184 527 134 115 129 531 119 119 143 170 17 0 108 17 0 170 119 168 184 170 134 134 184 134 127 127 127 134 134 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 2 2 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 4 4 2 1 1 4 4 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 AGREE MENT N O. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODECS2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT M a y — Continued 644 6024 6086 8524 1003 6026 1423 3358 6306 8869 8747 2972 8460 3287 3707 1685 1645 2908 1641 5281 6804 3642 6080 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 O L Y M P I A I N D U S INC O L Y M P I A M I L L S D I V L U 1 8 3 0 PA E L E C T R I C CO 5 D I V S 7 LUS P A N H A N D L E EASTERN P I P E LINE CO P O C A O F A M INC G R D E T R O I T ♦ W A Y N E C H P T R S POTLATCH CORP SOUTHERN D WARREN LU 5-484 POTOMAC ELECTRIC POWER CO WASHINGTON P R I N T I N G I N D U S O F M E T R O N Y INC L U 1 1 9 B R E L I A N C E ELEC CO DODGE MFG DIV MISHAWAKA SAN FRANCISCO EMPLOYERS COUNCIL 5 LUS S M A C C A O F M I L W A U K E E L U 24 S M A C N A M E T R O D E T R O I T C H P T R 6 C N T Y S L U 80 S O C A L I F S T E E L F A B R I C A T O R S LU 92 SOUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTH 6 LUS S P E R R Y R A N D C O R P U N I V A C D I V ST P A U L L U 2 0 4 7 S P R A G U E E L E C T R I C CO NORTH A D AMS PLTS L 200 SQUIBB E R ♦ SONS NEW BRUNSWICK LAWRENCEVLE S Q U I B B ER ♦ S O N S INC P + M L U 8 - 4 3 8 STA N L E Y W O R K S NEW B R I T A I N L 1433 UNION CARBIDE CORP CHEMICALS ♦ PLASTIC DIV U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E U P S T A T E N Y D I S T 12 L U S V O R N A O O C O R P 5 C O S 13 L U S N O N - F O O D S T O R E S WHIRLPOOL CORP ST J O S E P H D I V P L T S L U 1 9 1 8 W I S C O N S I N P O WER + L I G H T CO LU 965 Total: 120 a g r e e m e n t s ................. 1,350 1,900 1,150 1,650 1 ,000 3,100 3,500 1,150 2,000 1,200 2,200 1,350 3,000 3,200 1,150 2,200 2,200 2,600 1,150 1,700 3,500 1,700 1,450 420,800 22 49 49 17 24 49 27 35 50 17 17 34 15 35 36 28 28 34 28 42 54 36 49 63 23 00 34 71 53 21 32 93 35 34 93 34 41 14 22 22 16 22 21 00 34 35 3 37 127 357 164 343 500 243 335 400 187 18 7 112 11 9 1 27 347 357 357 218 357 53 1 184 218 127 1 4 4 2 4 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 15 16 16 15 15 15 20 20 28 28 54 37 17 37 35 23 20 28 28 28 37 35 35 58 16 35 30 26 54 20 38 30 36 36 36 36 36 37 37 36 36 36 48 88 00 21 23 16 10 92 92 21 21 10 32 21 11 30 21 93 52 54 57 47 21 35 31 21 31 21 11 00 93 21 32 33 59 35 33 31 31 31 35 00 00 90 119 600 143 143 11 6 11 9 53 1 531 335 335 155 553 17C 320 21 8 134 531 337 337 337 218 100 1 07 145 143 347 333 231 531 531 121 333 21 8 12 7 553 18 7 12 7 218 553 218 484 347 127 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 1 4 4 2 4 4 2 2 1 1 1 4 1 4 2 2 4 1 1 2 2 4 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 J________ June 8427 8491 8790 8488 8759 8410 258 248 1601 1659 6825 4154 8511 4099 3258 854 253 1629 1627 1628 4058 3344 3382 7136 8476 3294 1933 1225 6320 344 4418 1930 3762 3789 3792 3716 3764 4128 4127 3794 3618 3617 5770 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 A G C N E V C H A P ♦ 2 O T H S SO N E V 4 L U S A G C O F A M M O B I L E C H P T R 14 L U S A G C O F AM N Y S T A T E C H A P T E R I N C L U 1 7 A G C OF A M W P E N N B L D R S C H K E Y S T O N E B L D R S A S S N A G C O F C O N N I N C ♦ 1 O T H L A B R E L S 0 L S 4 2 4 15 A G C O F M A S S IN C + 4 O T H E R S 2 0 L U S A G R I P A C IN C J U N C T I O N C I T Y E U G E N E L U 6 7 0 A G R I P A C IN C S A L E M ♦ C O R V A L L I S L U 6 7 0 A L L I E D CH E M CORP INDUS CH E M D S Y R A C U S E WKS A L L I E D C H E M I C A L COR P SPEC CHEM D B U F F A L O DYE A L M A C S IN C L U 3 2 8 AM M C T O R S C O R P A M G E N E R A L C O R P A S S N O F C O N T R G P L U M B E R S OF TH E C I T Y OF N Y BA T H IRON W O RKS C ORP BATH ♦ B R U N S W I C K B E L O I T C O R P P A P E R M A C H I N E R Y D I V L U 1197 B E L T A S S N I N C N Y L U 40 C A L I F P R O C E S S O R S INC C E L A N E S E CORP AMC E L L E PLANT LU 1874 CELANESE CORP CELCO PLANT NARROWS LU 2024 C E L A N E S E COR P C E L R I V E R P L A N T L U 1093 C E S S N A AIR C R A F T CO W A L L A C E - P A W N E E DIV CHI C P N E U M A T I C TOOL C O UTICA CHRYSLER OUTBOARD CORP HARTFORD ♦ BEAVER DAM C I N N C U L I N A R Y C O U N C I L INC L U 12 C O N T R S A S S N O F W E S T C H C N T Y INC + 1 O T H E R L 6 0 COPELAND CORPORATION 3 LOCALS DUNLOP TIRE ♦ RUBBER CORP B U F FALO ETHYL COR P O X F O R D P A P E R CO DIV R U M F O R D LU 900 FELR MASTER FOOD AGMT FROZEN FOOD EMPLOYERS ASSN GAF CORP B INGHAMTON LU 306 G E N E R A L T I R E ♦ R U B B E R C O IND P R O D S D I V W A B A S H GENL ELEC CO BALLAST DEPT DANVILLE GENL ELEC CO BAT T E R Y P ROD G A I N E S V I L L E LU 2156 G E N L E L E C C O D I S H W A S H E R ♦ D I S P O S A L D M I L W 2 61 G E N L E L E C T R I C C O C H I C A G O ♦ C I C E R O P L T S L 57 1 GENL ELECT R I C CO EUC L I D LAMP PLT C L E V E L A N D G E N L E L E C T R I C CO E V E N D A L E GENL E L E C T R I C CO EVEND A L E LU 647 GENL E L ECTRIC CO M E D ICAL SYS T E M S DEPT MILW GENL ELE C T R I C CO NATL AG M T G E N L E L E C T R I C CO NAT L AGMT G E N L T E L E C O O F T H E N O R T H W E S T INC L U 8 9 1,500 7,000 2,000 1,800 1,500 6,500 2,000 1,900 1,300 1,050 2,000 1,500 3,500 1,600 1,000 2,500 55,000 2,200 1,800 1,400 9,000 1,100 1,000 1 ,000 1,600 3,400 1,100 1,800 1,500 6,500 1,400 1,300 1,100 1,300 1,800 3,200 1,000 1,400 3,800 1,400 17,500 85,000 2,800 AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT June— Continued 4420 1108 6834 1209 3714 1211 6835 8922 6845 5272 1249 4142 6529 1907 8552 7930 6066 6065 3709 1910 1131 2980 3645 4607 6792 7990 831 8558 6023 8916 8520 1265 3776 8886 7949 8576 2624 4609 4181 8905 5240 1105 399 6517 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 It 4 0 0 1 1 500 2,300 2,250 1,600 1,400 1,300 1,000 1,500 1,250 5,000 1,900 1,500 2,100 1,000 35,000 1,400 2,800 1,500 1,500 1,250 1,200 2,200 8,000 1,250 1,000 3,100 1,500 1,900 1,25 0 2,500 1,900 3,000 1,300 2,200 3,800 1,750 1,300 1,500 1,200 2,000 2,200 2,550 5,000 G E N L T I M E C O R P W E S T C L O X D I V P E R U LU 125 7 3 GF B U S I N E S S E Q U I P M E N T INC Y O U N G S T O W N G R E A T A + P T E A C O INC L U 10 G R E A T N O R T H E R N P A P E R CO 2 M I L L I N O C K E T M I L L S G T E L E N K U R T INC H A M M 6 R M I L L P A P E R CO ER I E DIV LU 620 H I N K Y - D I N K Y S U P E R M A R K E T S INC O M A H A L U 1 0 1 5 I-A B O I L E R + T A N K C O N T R S O F CHI R E P A I R WR K I— A G R O C E R Y A G M T Q U A D - C I T I E S L U 1 4 7 0 I-A M A S T E R C E M E N T + A L L D RY B U L K C O M M O D I T I E S I-A WES T C O A S T P + P C O N V E R T INDUS M U L T I P L E J A C K S O N V I L L E S H I P Y A R D S IN C L U 8 0 5 J O R O A N M A R S H CO L U 1291 K E L L Y - S P R I N G F I E L D T I R E CO C U M B E R L A N D L 26 L A T H I N G ♦ M E T A L F U R R I N G C O N T R S A S S N C A L I F IN C L E A G U E O F V O L U N T A R Y H O S P I T A L S ♦ H O M E S OF N Y L O N G I S L A N D L I G H T I N G CO LU 1381 LONG ISLAND L I G H T I N G CO LU 1049 M A G N A V O X CO FORT W A Y N E LU 254 M A N S F I E L D TIRE ♦ R UBBER CO M A N S F I E L D L U 17 M A N U F A C T U R I N G W O O D W R K S A S S N GR N Y ♦ 1 O T H MASTER LOCK CO MILW A U K E E LU 469 M F R S O F I L L U M I N A T I O N P R O D U C T S INC N Y L U 3 N A T L A S S N O F D O L L M F R S INC L U 2 2 3 NATL TEA CO NATL W A R E HOUSE DIV N E C A B U F F A L O W E S T E R N NY S T A T E C H P T L U 41 NEW ENG S P O R T S W E A R MFRS A SSN 6 LUS NO R T H E A S T ERECTORS ASSN ♦ 2 OTH S LU 7 OHI O EDISON CO LOCS 1 1 8 - 1 2 6 - 1 8 1 - 3 5 0 - 3 5 1 - 4 5 7 P A C I F I C P I P E C O M P A N Y OF O A K L A N D L U 342 P D C O F E M A S S INC P H I L A D E L P H I A C O N T A I N E R A S S N LU 375 P H I L C O - F O R D CORP ELECT R O N I C S D L ANSDALE 1695 P L U M B I N G C O N T R S A S S N O F M E T R O S T L O U I S L U 35 SEATTLE AREA HOSPITAL COUNCIL S M A C C A LOS A N G E L E S CH + 1 OTH AS S N LU 108 S T O C K H A M V A L V E S ♦ F I T T I N G S INC B I R M I N G H A M S T U F F E D T O Y M F R S A S S N INC L 2 2 3 S U M M A C ORP HUG H E S H E L I C O P T E R S DIV L U 1553 U N P A I N T I N G C O N T R S A S S N + 1 O T H L U 79 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC LU 177 U P H O L S T E R E O F U R N I T U R E M F R S A S S N OF C A L I F WATSONVILLE EMPLRS FROZEN FOOD ASSN WOODWARD ♦ LOTHROP Total: 8 7 a g r e e m e n t s .................. 38 25 54 26 36 26 54 17 54 42 26 37 53 30 17 80 49 49 36 30 25 34 36 39 54 76 23 17 49 17 17 26 36 17 80 17 33 39 37 17 42 25 20 53 33 31 10 11 93 23 46 30 00 00 90 59 14 52 93 21 21 21 32 31 21 35 21 20 00 21 14 10 31 93 10 23 23 43 91 93 63 00 93 00 20 93 93 50 335 335 155 100 127 231 184 112 184 531 244 112 184 333 147 332 12 7 12 7 107 333 119 553 127 221 531 127 134 11 6 342 170 164 2 31 553 170 903 18 7 335 221 119 164 531 205 5 31 5 00 1 1 4 4 1 1 1 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 2 2 4 4 4 1 2 1 2 2 4 2 2 2 4 1 2 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 4 2 1 2 2 4 36 25 53 30 22 60 34 26 31 31 22 26 52 28 37 26 54 17 55 26 28 34 35 35 21 00 21 21 31 62 00 00 56 72 34 31 21 56 14 93 43 35 54 20 484 119 184 333 134 118 112 100 334 18 8 337 231 531 335 218 231 15 5 164 218 231 231 119 1 4 4 4 2 2 1 1 4 4 1 1 2 4 1 1 1 2 2 1 l 2 374,100 1 July 3609 1113 6528 1900 618 7948 2923 1257 2104 2105 609 1247 6404 1603 4087 1293 6851 8590 6902 1231 1678 2930 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 A L L E N - 8 R A D L E Y CO M I L W A U K E E L U 1111 AM H O S P S U P P L Y C O R P H A M I L I N D U S D I V L U 1 5 3 3 ARLEN REALTY ♦ DEVELOPMENT CORP KORVETTES DIV A R M S T R O N G RUBB E R CO MAST E R A GMT 4 LUS A S S N OF K N I T T E D F A B R I C S MFRS INC NYC A S S N O F P R I V A T E H O S P I T A L S IN C L U 1 4 4 BABCOCK ♦ WILCOX CO POWER GENERATION GROUP BCWATERS SOUTHERN PAPER CORP CALHOUN B R O W N S H O E CO BRO W N SH O E CO C O N E M I L L S C O R P W H I T E O A K P L A N T L U 1391 C R O W N Z E L L E R B A C H C O R P B O G A L U S A M I L L L U 189 DETROIT LUMBERMENS ASSN LU 458 DIAMOND SHAMROCK CORP DIAMOND SHAMROCK CHEM F A I R C H I L D I N D U S T R I E S INC F A R M I N G D A L E L 1987 F E DERAL PAPER B O ARD CO R I E G E L W O O D L 738 F E R N A N D E S S U P E R M A R K E T S INC L U 4 F L O O R C O V E R I N G ASSN O F SO C A L I F + 3 O T H 12 4 7 G R E A T E R ST L O U I S A U T O M O T I V E A S S N ♦ l O T H E R HAMMERMILL PAPER CO THILMANY PULP + PAPER DIV H E R C U L E S INC C O V I N G T O N P L A N T L U 8 8 4 H O L L O W M E T A L D O O R + B U C K A S S N INC 5,300 1,000 4,500 3,750 2,500 4,000 3,100 1,000 4,000 6,000 2,000 1,050 1,600 1,000 1,000 1,000 2,500 1,800 2,200 1,300 1,100 1,800 AGREE MENT N O. EXP. DATE COMPANY NUMBER OF WORKERS AND LOCAT I O N 1 CODES2 UNION UNIT SIC STATE 1,050 1,200 1,300 1,200 2,100 1,250 2,200 1,200 1,000 2,000 1,900 2,500 5,000 6,000 1,050 1,950 1,250 8,650 1 ,000 1,600 1,250 11,250 1,900 1,000 6,800 1,000 13,600 1,550 33,000 1,85 0 1,200 1,350 1,850 176,500 20 20 55 56 16 26 54 79 35 72 19 42 49 58 86 34 37 22 42 36 48 48 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 19 26 26 36 43 93 33 21 00 62 00 21 21 22 16 90 23 92 93 35 23 20 50 71 21 00 23 00 00 93 00 21 00 52 00 56 41 531 480 531 332 112 231 184 19 2 218 236 218 531 500 14 5 145 218 500 134 531 347 346 201 12 7 127 484 218 500 127 347 1 27 231 10 0 531 3 3 3 3 3 1 4 2 1 2 4 2 4 2 2 1 1 2 4 1 4 4 1 4 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 4 4 1,695 1,250 3,600 7,700 4,000 2,000 1,400 2,400 1,300 2,65 0 1,500 1,200 3,800 2,150 2,000 1,400 6,000 1,250 1,200 1,000 1,500 2,500 1,050 1,500 3,000 2,15 0 8,500 1,000 8,000 2,400 15 17 49 20 17 17 42 35 36 20 36 25 30 20 37 27 20 30 17 36 23 17 17 20 20 20 20 58 20 32 63 93 63 00 34 34 00 00 32 42 21 00 84 00 31 34 00 74 14 43 21 14 00 42 35 00 00 21 00 41 600 17 0 12 7 155 129 143 335 335 553 15 5 55 3 205 333 155 553 243 155 333 1 70 500 305 127 127 155 155 155 155 145 155 357 2 2 4 4 2 2 4 4 1 1 1 4 1 4 1 2 4 1 2 4 4 2 2 1 1 4 4 2 4 1 July— C o n t i n u e d 238 338 6921 6912 8497 1218 6762 7960 3384 7714 16 5231 6025 7102 7970 2920 4160 621 5255 3744 5777 5778 3626 3625 3627 3630 3629 3740 3628 26 1277 1275 3783 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 07 I - A A D D E N D U M TO M A S T E R D A I R Y A G M T ST L O U I S I- A D R I E D F R U I T I N D U S T R Y L U 11 I-A G A R A G E A T T E N D A N T S A G M T L U 731 I-A M A J O R S H O E C H A I N S T O R E S L U S 1 2 6 8 + 2 8 7 I-A M I S S O U R I R I V E R B A S I N A G M T KIMBERLY-CLARK CORPORATION MEMPHIS K R O G E R CO LU 1099 L E A G U E O F NY T H E A T R E S ♦ P R O D U C E R S INC L U 1 N A T L C A S H R E G I S T E R CO D A T A E N T R Y 0 I T HACA NJ L A U N D R Y + C L E A N I N G I N S T I T U T E L U 2 8 4 OLIN CORP NEW HAVEN + BRANFORD LODGE 609 O R E G O N D R A YMEN + W A R E H O U S E M E N S ASSN PA P O W E R ♦ L I G H T C O E A S T E R N PA P R E S I D E N T S CNCL OF FOOD BEV + L O D G I N G 4 LUS SAN F R A N C I S C O CLUB INSTITUTE 6 LUS TRANE COMPANY LA C R O S S E L U 21 T R W INC H A R R I S B U R G L U 1 4 0 0 U N I T E D K N I T W E A R M F R S L E A G U E INC U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC A T L A N T I C A R E A 2 0 LO W A R W I C K E L E C T R O N I C S IN C F O R R E S T C I T Y L 1 1 0 6 W E S T E R N U N I O N T E L E G R A P H CO W E S T E R N U N I O N T E L E G R A P H CO NATL W E S T I N G H O U S E E L E C C O R P B E A V E R P L A N T L U 20 1 W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP W E S T I N G H O U S E EL E C C O R P S U N N Y V A L E LU 93 W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC C O R P E L E C T R O N I C T UBE D 1833 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP A E R O S P A C E DIV LU 1805 WESTVACO CORP CONTAINER 8 LUS W E Y E R H A E U S E R C O P L Y M O U T H L U S 3 5 6 4 2 3 *■ 4 1 5 W H I R L P O O L C O R P ST P A U L D I V L U 8 2 7 Total: 55 a g r e e m e n t s .................... August 8420 8610 6000 200 8715 8831 5270 3230 3769 205 3780 1132 1919 203 4076 1429 217 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 A G C O F A M INC A I R C O N D I T I O N G ♦ R E F R I G C O N T R S A S S N OF SO C A L A L A B A M A POWER CO A L A B A M A 9 LUS A R M O U R ♦ CO M A S T E R AGMT A S S O C U N D E R G R O U N D C O N T R S INC L U S 3 2 4 A + B A S S O C I A T E D U N D E R G R O U N D C O N T R S IN C B O W M A N T R A N S P O R T A T I O N IN C O - T - R + P I C K UP B U C Y R U S - E R I E C O IND P A W I S D E S I G N + M F G C O R P C O N N E R S V I L L E L U 151 D U B U Q U E P A C K I N G CO LU 150 E A G L E E L E C M F G C O INC + E A G L E P L A S T I C S L 3 6 5 F L E X S T E E L I N D U S T R I E S INC IOWA PA + T E X 3 L U S G A T E S R U B B E R CO D E N V E R L 154 GEN HOST CORP C U DAHY CO C U D A H Y FOO D S CO DIV GOO D Y E A R A EROSPACE CORP AKRON G R A P H I C A R T S A S S N O F M I C H INC L U 2 0 - B JOHN MORR E L L 4 CO MA S T E R AGMT 1934 8783 3731 882 8781 8820 210 211 218 222 7121 223 2337 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 K E L L Y - S P R I N G F I E L D T I R E CO T Y L E R M A S T E R P L U M B E R S A S S N B O S T O N L U 12 M C G R A W - E D I S O N C O B U S S M A N D I V ST L O U I S N A T L N E C K W E A R C O N F E R E N C E LUS 2 5 0 253 N E C A B O S T O N C H P T R E L E C C O N T R A S S N L U 103 N E C A L O U I S V I L L E C H P T R LU 369 O S C A R M A Y E R 4 CO D A V E N P O R T P L A N T LU 431 O S C A R M A Y E R 4 CO M A D I S O N P L A N T LU 538 R A T H P A C K I N G CO I O W A T E X NC 4 G A 6 L U S S W I F T 4 C O 4 E S T E C H INC M A S T E R A G M T U N I T E D R E S T L I Q U O R D E A L E R S O F M A N H A T T A N INC W I L S O N 4 C O INC M A S T E R A G M T 3M C O M P A N Y L U 6 - 7 5 Total: 30 a g r e e m e n t s .............. . . 81,095 AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY EXP. DATE AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT September 3253 4001 7411 3348 1300 6082 4008 4009 4007 4010 6045 3380 3222 3274 6302 6333 6300 213 4019 4182 4104 3706 3782 4022 1904 207 8773 7302 3747 3383 1610 208 7118 7720 7942 868 2342 2109 2110 3225 3226 6318 6842 8323 6799 8763 3360 6909 3343 219 7518 3351 2367 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 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 A C M 6 - C L E V E L A N D C O R P N A T L A C M E C O D I V L U 19 A M M O T O R S C O R P N A T L E C O N A G M T ♦ S U P P S 7 4 ♦ 75 BRONX REALTY A D V I S O R Y BOA R D LU 32-E C A T E R P I L L A R TRA C T O R C O T O W M O T O R CORP SUB C H A M P I O N IN T L C O R P C H A M P I O N P A P E R S D I V CHI ♦ S U B U R B A N R E F U S E D I S P O S A L A S S N L 731 CHRYSLER CORP OFF + CLERICAL CHRYSLER CORP PARTS DEPOTS C H R Y S L E R C O R P P R O D U C T I O N - M A I N T E N C E 43 LUS CHRYSLER CORPORATION ENGINEERING CONSOL GAS SUPPLY CORP CLARKSBURG LU 999 D E E R E ♦ C O J O H N D E E R E H O R I C O N W K S L U 873 D E E R E AND CO IOWA A N D IL L I N O I S FMC C O R P B E A R I N G ♦ C H A I N D I V S I N D I A N A P O L I S F O O D E M P L O Y E R S C O U N C I L INC F O O D I N D W A R E H O U S E F O O D E M P L R S C N C L INC F O O D I N D U S O F F I C E 5 L U S F O O D E M P L R S C N C L IN C D E L I V E R Y D R V R S A G M T 9 L S F O O D E M P L R S C O U N C I L INC L U 5 6 3 FORD MOTOR CO FORD MOTOR CO BODY E N G I N E E R I N G D E A R B O R N GENERAL DYN A M I C S CORP E LECTRIC BOAT GENL ELEC CO TUBE DEPT O W E N S B O R O LU 783 GENL MOTORS CORP GENL MOTORS CORP GENL MOTORS CORP INLAND MFG DIV DAYTON LU87 GEO A HORMEL + CO A U S T I N LU P-9 G R E A T L A K E S D R E D G E ♦ D O C K C O M P A N Y L U 25 G R E A T E R S E A T T L E R E T A I L D R U G A S S N IN C L U 3 3 0 GTE S Y L V A N I A LU 1654 OTTAWA HESSTON CORP HESSTON H O O K E R C H E M ♦ P L A S T I C C O R P N I A G A R A F A L L S PL H Y G R A D E FOODS PRO D U C T S CORP 9 LUS I— A H O T E L S R E S T A U R A N T + T A V E R N S F R E S N O I— A L I N E N S U P P L I E R S L U 2 8 4 I— A S E C U R I T Y A G E N C I E S U P T O W N A G M T B A Y A R E A I - A S P O R T S W E A R A G M T L U S 10 1 ♦ 2 1 3 ILLUMINATING ♦ ALLIED GLASSWARE MFRS ASSN I N T E R C O IN C A R K A N S A S M I S S O U R I + I L L I N O I S I N T E R C O IN C M I S S O U R I I L L I N O I S ♦ K E N T U C K Y INTL H A R V E S T E R CO C L E R I C A L ♦ T E C H N I C A L INTL H A R V E S T E R CO M A I N LABOR AG M T P R O D - M A I N T INTL H A R V E S T E R CO D E POT + T R A N S F E R C O N T R A C T J E W E L C O S I N C E I S N E R F O O D S T O R E S D I V CH I 5 9 5 K A I S E R STEEL CORP P + M EES 5 LUS L O B L A W INC NY + P E N N NEC A SO FLA CHAP W I R EMEN AGMT LU 349 R E E D TOOL CO D R I L L I N G E Q U I P M E N T DIV LU 2083 R E TAIL A P PAREL M E R C H A N T S ASSN LU 340 R O C K W E L L INTL CORP DR A P E R D H O P E D A L E 2 LUS S C H U L D E R B E R G - K U R D L E C O INC L U 1 1 7 SO FLORIOA HOTEL + MOTEL ASSN DADE COUNTY SPERRY RAND CORP SPERRY VICKERS DIV OMAHA 3M C O M P A N Y L U 222 Total: 53 a g r e e m e n t s .................. 1 1300 10,000 4,000 36,050 2,000 1,250 4,500 2,550 115,000 5,300 1,550 1,000 22,400 2,800 3,250 1,300 1,050 1,650 170,000 1,05 0 1,800 2,150 25,000 420,000 5,000 2,800 2,000 2,300 1,750 1,500 1,200 1,400 2,200 1,500 4,500 2,450 1,400 6,450 3,150 2,200 36,500 1,350 1,200 1,400 1,800 2,000 1,200 3,000 1,150 1,450 8,000 1,300 1,000 940, 100 35 37 65 35 26 49 37 37 37 37 49 35 35 35 50 50 50 20 37 37 37 36 36 37 30 20 16 59 36 35 28 20 58 72 73 23 32 31 31 35 35 50 54 10 54 17 35 56 35 20 70 35 32 31 30 21 00 31 33 00 00 00 00 00 35 00 32 93 93 93 93 00 34 16 61 00 00 31 41 00 91 31 47 21 00 93 22 93 93 31 00 00 00 00 00 33 93 20 59 74 21 14 52 59 46 62 354 553 118 553 231 531 553 553 553 553 118 218 553 335 531 531 531 155 553 500 500 107 347 553 333 155 129 184 12 7 500 500 15 5 145 236 500 134 137 334 188 553 553 553 539 600 155 127 335 305 335 15 5 14 5 107 107 1 4 2 4 1 2 4 4 4 1 4 1 4 4 2 2 2 2 4 1 1 1 4 4 1 1 4 2 1 l 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 1 1 4 4 4 4 1 4 2 1 2 1 1 2 4 1 28 20 35 35 20 35 54 49 37 37 48 30 54 48 62 59 21 47 33 31 56 31 31 00 33 61 56 95 202 531 187 218 531 347 184 342 354 461 127 333 155 127 4 1 4 1 2 4 4 1 1 4 4 1 1 4 October 1663 352 3311 3326 329 3293 6846 6060 4018 4169 5791 1936 6823 5798 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 A M E R I C A N ENKA CORP L O W L A N D LU 815 B C R D O C I T R U S P R O D C O O P E R A T I V E W I N T E R H A V E N 60 C A R R I E R CORP L U 527 C E S S N A A I R C R A F T CO H U T C H I N S O N L U 1992 CHICAGO BAKERY EMPLOYERS LABOR COUNCIL C H R Y S L E R C O R P DA Y T O N P L A N T S 1 + 2 L U 775 C O L O N I A L S T O R E S IN C R A L E I G H D I V L U 2 0 4 D A Y T O N P O WER ♦ LIG H T CO LU 175 E A T O N C O R P A X L E D I V L U 21 GENL MOTORS CORP PLT PROTECTION EMPS G E N L T E L E C O O F ILL S E R C O N S T + S U P P L Y D E P T S GENL TIRE ♦ RUBBER CO P + M M A Y F I E L D LU 665 G R E A T A + P T E A CO INC LU 525 H A W A I I A N T E L E P H O N E CO L U 1357 3,800 1,000 4,200 2,250 1,050 3,150 1,350 2,300 1,350 2,600 1,800 1,300 1,000 3,300 AGREE MENT NO. EXP. 0ATE COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 1,700 1,500 1,700 2,000 2,500 1,500 5,350 8,000 2,500 1,000 1,750 1,250 3,500 1,000 1,600 5,100 1,100 1,100 74, 600 54 54 32 50 16 38 80 37 35 20 73 30 25 36 54 37 37 49 93 85 00 30 00 33 93 00 00 84 23 31 00 31 21 31 34 35 1 55 184 174 531 112 337 118 553 553 155 118 333 205 127 184 500 553 129 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 1 2 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 1,050 3,800 2,700 1,900 1,300 4 v3 0 0 1,450 3,300 1,000 2,05 0 2,150 1,500 1,900 2,85 0 1,700 2,000 8,000 4,650 3,000 2,400 9,000 1,200 1,800 1,700 1,300 2,500 1,000 2,350 1,600 1,500 1,400 3,500 81,850 35 35 73 39 31 73 28 37 33 35 54 23 70 20 20 70 42 54 42 58 48 54 54 19 23 54 36 49 24 48 58 32 32 35 33 23 33 33 22 00 35 33 93 30 14 00 23 43 00 35 00 43 93 93 93 32 62 31 33 61 64 00 43 00 553 553 1 18 333 155 118 500 553 553 553 155 134 145 531 15 5 145 53 1 184 531 145 1 02 155 155 100 335 184 127 500 343 531 145 174 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 4 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 2 2 20 28 23 37 35 36 36 54 54 17 34 21 84 22 20 00 33 56 93 93 93 00 93 61 101 121 142 553 196 346 11 9 184 184 112 12 7 203 1 1 2 4 1 1 4 3 3 3 4 1 UNION UNIT O c t o b e r— C o n t i n u e d 6743 6817 2328 6311 8498 4424 7929 4028 3332 386 7903 1935 1103 3795 6844 4092 4042 6081 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 I— A B U T C H E R S ♦ R E T F I S H + P O U L T R Y A G M T L U 1 1 5 I -A C H A I N ♦ I N D E P E N D E N T F O O D S T O R E S L U 1 5 6 4 I— A C H I N A W A R E M A N U F A C T U R E R S G R O U P I-A OIL P E T R O CHEM ♦ L I Q U I D P R O D D R V R S AGMT I-A S O U T H E A S T E R N S T A T E S B O I L E R M A K E R E M P L R S J O H N S O N ♦ J O H N S O N C H I C A G O LU 1437 K A I S E R F O U N D A T I O N H O S P I T A L S L U 250 M A C K T R U C K INC M A S T E R S H O P A G M T M A S S E Y - F E R G U S O N IN C M A S T E R 4 L U S M O N F O R T O F C O L O R A D O INC M O N F O R T P A C K I N G C O P I T T S B U R G H B U I L D I N G S A S S N L U 29 R U B B E R M A I D I NC W O O S T E R L U 3 0 2 SIMMONS CO MASTER MULTI-PLANT AGMT SMITH A 0 ELECTRIC MOTOR DIV LU 1977 S T A R S U P E R M A R K E T S INC L U 345 T R W IN C T A P C O — V A L V E S - M A I N P L A N T - R E P L A C E M E N T T R W INC V A N D Y K E P L A N T S T E R L I N G H E I G H T S WISC P U B L I C SER V I C E CO R P L U 310 Total: 32 a g r e e m e n t s .................... • I November 3386 3215 7977 4611 2131 7976 1647 4017 2626 3216 6765 820 7504 240 209 7508 5218 6742 5254 7141 5790 6778 6772 27 872 6748 3732 6067 1026 5776 7127 2330 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 ALL I S - C H A L M E R S CORP LA PORTE PLT LU 1319 A L L I S - C H A L M E R S CORP W EST A L L I S PLT LU 248 APT B L D G O W N E R S + M G R S ASSN OF C H I C A G O LU 1 A R M S T R O N G CO R K CO L A N C A S T E R FLOOR P L A N T 285 C H I C A G O R A W H I D E M F G CO E L G I N D L U 221 C H I C A G O REAL ESTATE O W N E R S C O U N C I L LU 1 C OLGATE-PALMOLIVE CO JERSEY CITY PLT EATON CORP 6 PLANT DIVS E V ANS P R O D U C T S CO R A C I N E STEEL C A S T I N G S D I V F I A T - A L L I S C O N S T M A C H INC S P R I N G F I E L D L U 1027 F O O D E M P L O Y E R S C O U N C I L INC G A R M E N T I N D U S T R I E S OF I L L I N O I S C H I C A G O G R E A T E R B O S T O N H O T E L AND MOT O R INN A S S N G R E A T E R NY MILK DEA L E R S L A BOR COMM GREATER PHILA MEAT PACKERS ASSN ♦ OTHERS H O TEL ♦ M O T E L ASSN OF G R E A T E R ST L O U I S I-A C E N T R A L S T A T E S AREA TANK T R U C K A G M T I-A C H A I N ♦ I N D F O O D S T O R E S L U 4 4 4 I -A E A S T E R N A R E A T A N K H A U L I-A I N D S T A N D A R D R E S T A U R A N T C O N T R A C T 5 L U S I -A L O C A L T V C O D E F A I R P R A C + R E G I O N A L S C H D L E I-A RETA I L D I S T R I B U T I O N A G R E E M E N T L U 229 I-A R E T A I L M E A T M A R K E T S F R O Z E N F O O D L O C K E R ICI U N I T E D S T A T E S I N C C H A R L E S T O W N L U S 3 2 0 6 9 2 IMPERIAL READING CORP LAFOLLETTE DIV LU 14590 K R O G E R C O L O C A L S 1 0 5 9 31 ♦ 1 5 5 2 L I T T O N I N DUSTRIES INC J E F F E R S O N E L E CTRIC D I V L O U I S V I L L E GAS ♦ E L E C T R I C CO L O U I S V I L L E MASONITE CORP HARDBOARO DIV LAUREL LU 5-443 RCA GL O B A L C O M M U N I C A T I O N S INC C O M M TRADE D I V ST L O U I S R E S T O W N E R S A S S N 5 L U S U S P O T T E R S A S S N PA O H I O W V A Total: 32 a g r e e m e n t s .................... J______________ December 398 1602 844 4015 3392 3767 3693 6729 6756 8661 2982 505 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 ADOLPH COORS CO GOLDEN LU 366 A M C Y A N A M I D C O B O U N D B R O O K L U 11 1 A M M I L L I N E R Y M F R S A S S N INC L U S 2 4 ♦ 4 2 DANA CORP TOLEDO DISTRIBUTION CENTER F E D D E R S C O R P E F F I N G H A M P L A N T L U 10 5 G T E S Y L V A N I A INC S M I T H F I E L D HU G H E S AIRCRAFT CO LU 1553 I -A F O O D S T O R E C O N T R A C T ALAMEDA COUNTY 870 I-A G R O C E R Y ♦ D E L I C A T E S S E N L U 648 I-A N A T L T R A N S I E N T M E M B E R S INTL TEL E ♦ TE L E C O R P ITT G E N E R A L C O N T R O L S L O E W S C O R P L O R I L L A R D D I V L O U I S V I L L E L U 201 1,650 1,500 3,500 9,500 1,200 1,650 8,000 4,000 3,100 7,000 1,200 1,550 AGREEFF T NO. cXP. 0 AT E COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CG PES* SIC STATE UNION UNIT D e c e m b e r — Continued 7304 2664 6048 3647 8726 6072 6071 6073 3694 3734 3660 6755 7524 2116 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 M E T R O P A C K A G E S T O R E A S S N INC 1 2 2 MFRS INDUS RELS ASSN M I C H I G A N C O N S O L I D A T E D G A S C O L U 80 N Y L A M P ♦ S H A D E M F R S A S S N INC L U 3 N E C A INC W E S T E R N P E N N C H P T R LU 5 P A C I F I C GAS ♦ £LEC CO O F F ♦ C L E R I C A L LU 1245 P A C I F I C GAS ♦ ELEC CO O P E R M A I N T ♦ C 0 N S T R PACIFIC GAS ♦ ELEC CO R A D I O COR P OF AM NEW J E R S E Y U N I T S 1 2 3 RCA CORP LU 3154 M O N T I C E L L O R C A C O R P N A T L A G M T 10 L U S RETAIL GROCERS ASSN SAN JOSE AREA 428 SAN MATEO COUNTY RESTAURANT HOTEL OWNERS W E Y E N B E R G SHOE MFG CO M I L W A U K E E 4 LUS Total: 26 a g r e e m e n t s ...... . 1.000 5.600 1*700 1.700 1*150 3,800 14*950 2,000 2,350 1,050 17,500 5,750 6,000 1,200 59 33 49 36 17 49 49 49 36 36 36 54 70 31 21 00 34 21 23 93 93 93 22 32 00 93 93 35 126 161 118 127 12 7 127 127 319 500 119 127 184 145 188 2 2 4 2 2 4 4 4 4 1 4 2 2 4 . 109,600 Total: a g r e e m e n t s . ... 681; w o r k e r s .................... j 3 , 3 5 8 , 0 9 5 1 See a p p e n d i x A for abbreviations. 2 S ee a p p e n d i x B for definitions of codes. N O T E : D a t a b a s e d o n a g r e e m e n t s o n file with the B u r e a u of L a b o r Statistics, excluding railroads, airlines a n d g o v e r n m e n t agreements. Table 10. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1976 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY EXP. DATE AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Metal mining 8328 8323 05 09 10 10 45 93 335 600 1 1 14 43 600 4 1,000 8,500 15,000 5,800 8,000 2,500 2,200 1,050 12,000 2,000 1,500 2,850 3,500 1,800 1,400 1,600 1,000 1,750 2,500 3,000 1,400 7,100 2,650 1,200 1,000 1,500 2,400 24,250 8,000 15,000 3,200 4,000 2,500 1,500 1,300 10,000 2,850 1,600 1,900 1,750 1,000 1,500 1,200 1,000 2,000 7,000 1,000 1,500 7,000 24,850 3,000 1,500 1,800 1,500 6,500 1,69 5 238,095 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 74 59 59 40 32 70 50 71 31 72 00 59 59 34 59 00 40 31 31 21 93 31 50 59 62 34 62 86 34 34 34 34 34 88 15 10 35 21 30 21 21 21 21 00 21 23 00 23 23 33 34 88 23 16 10 63 119 143 1 19 11 9 143 143 119 119 129 143 119 143 119 12 9 12 9 143 143 119 1 43 143 115 119 11 9 143 119 143 11 9 600 143 11 9 129 531 116 531 143 143 119 12 9 119 119 11 9 143 119 116 119 129 119 531 119 119 119 119 143 116 119 600 2 2 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 3,000 5,500 4,600 16 16 16 21 21 21 53 1 129 119 2 2 2 H 0 M E S T A K E M I N I N G CO LU 7044 KA I S E R STEEL C0RP P ♦ M EES 5 LUS Total: 2 a g r e e m e n t s ............... ... M i n i n g a nd q u a r r y i n g of nonmetallic m i n e r a l s , 8334 03 LIMPUS QUARRIES 8616 8733 8421 8622 8768 8915 8621 8903 8830 8689 8779 8881 8743 8656 8865 8770 8931 8797 8634 8429 8929 8436 8875 8925 8454 8461 8625 8409 8416 8666 8655 8823 8712 8908 8645 8404 8626 8431 8744 8774 8567 8646 8652 8843 8447 8594 8849 8848 8455 8434 8460 8427 8488 8759 8410 8420 03 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 05 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 08 A G C O F A M S A N A N T O N I O C H P T R L U 14 A GC OF AM S O U T H F L O R I D A C H P T R 4 LUS A GC OF AM S O U T H F L O R I D A 3 D I S T C N C L S BLDRS A S S N OF K A N S A S CITY EMPLOYERS NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE EVANSVILLE AGC ARKANSAS CHAP ARK + OKLA 6 LOCALS AGC NE FLA C H P T R DIST CNCL AGC OF AM AR K A N S A S C H A P T E R LU 690 A G C O F AM A S S O C C O N T R S O F O H I O INC 4 L U S AGC OF AM B A T O N RO U G E C H P T R LU 1177 A G C O F AM C H A T T A N O O G A C H P T 7 L U S AGC OF AM FL A W C O A S T C H P T R 3 LUS A G C O F AM F L A W E S T C O A S T C H P T R 7 L U S A G C O F A M I NC M I C H C H A P L U 3 2 4 A - B - C - D AGC OF AM NE F L O R I D A C H P T R L 673 + 673 A B A G C O F E A S T T E N N IN C C H A T T A N O O G A B R L U 8 4 6 AGC OF N D A K O T A L U 580 A S S O C C O N T R S O F O H I O INC BLDG T R A O E S E M P L R S ASSN CLE V E D LU 310 B L D G T R A O E S E M P L R S A S S N + 1 O T H NYC VIC C A L I F C O N F O F M A S O N C O N T R S A S S N INC L 1 3 2 0 22 CARPENTER CONTRS ASSN ♦ 2 OTHERS CLEV I-A C A R P E N T E R S GENL C O N T R A C T I N G AGMT I - A G E N L C O N T R A C T I N G B U S I N E S S L U 30 1 N E G O T I A T I N G C O M M OF M I D D L E TE N N G E N L C O N T R S SOUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN + 1 OTH WEST TENN CONSTR INDUS C O L L E C T I V E B A R G GROUP AGC + OTH E R S ARIZ A G C OF A M D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 1 O T H L U S 3 3 4 + 1 0 7 6 AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R A GC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R L U 3 2 4 - A - B - C A G C O F AM D E T R O I T C H P T R L U S 2 4 7 6 1 4 ♦ 3 3 9 A G C O F AM D E T R O I T C H P T R I R O N W K R S L U 25 A G C O F A M N E V A D A C H A P + 2 O T H S L U 631 A G C O F A M RI C H P T R 3 L U S A G C O F M A S S INC + 2 O T H 2 0 L U S A L L I E D C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L R S A S S N INC M I L W A U K E E BTEA WESTCH + PUTNAM BLDG CONSTR C A L U M E T BLDRS ASSN AGC 3 O T H IND ♦ MI C H C O N S T R E M P L O Y E R S L A B O R R E L A T I O N S A S S N OF N Y C O N S T R E M P L R S L A B R E L S A S S N - B T E A L U 12 C O N S T R E M P L R S L A B R E L S A S S N OF N Y S T A T E I N C C O N S T R EM P L R S OF THE H U D S O N V A L L E Y + 1 OTH E A S T E R N N Y C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L O Y E R S INC A L B A N Y E A S T E R N N Y C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L R S INC M A S T E R BLDRS ASSN OF W E S T E R N PA M O N R O E V I L L E M A S T E R B L D R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N P A INC 2 2 6 4 M A S T E R B L D R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N P A INC C O U N C 4 0 M A S T E R B U I L D E R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N P A INC MID AM RE G I O N A L B A R G A I N I N G ASSN S O U T H W M I C H C O N T R S ASSN + 1 O T H 6 LUS AGC NEV C H A P + 2 O T H S SO N E V 4 LUS AGC OF AM W P E N N B L D R S C H K E Y S T O N E B L D R S A S S N A G C O F C O N N I N C ♦ 1 O T H L A B R E L S D L S 4 2 4 15 A G C O F M A S S INC + 4 O T H E R S 2 0 L U S A G C O F A M INC Total: 56 a g r e e m e n t s .............. 1,500 1,400 2, 900 except fuels INC K A N S A S C I T Y + V I C | 1,600 Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t ................ . . • 1 , 6 0 0 Building c o n s t r u c t i o n - g e n e r a l contractors i Construction other than building construction— g e n e r a l contractors 8709 8711 8710 03 03 03 A G C N Y S T A T E C H P T R INC 11 L O C A L S A GC OF AM N Y S T ATE C H P T R 4 L U S AGC OF AM NY S T A T E C H P T R 4 6 L U S AGREEWENT NO* COMPANY EXP. DATE ANO L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Construction other than building c o n s t r u c t i o n - g e n e r a l c ontractors— C o n t i n u e d 8716 8470 8846 8911 8932 8812 8682 8926 8462 8789 8798 8599 8665 8631 8745 8482 8500 8491 8790 8476 8497 8773 8498 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 8541 8517 8898 8669 8806 8519 8562 8678 8568 8546 8791 8721 8722 8874 8693 8566 6656 8580 8851 8799 8657 8571 8914 8583 8540 8824 8822 8677 8507 8547 8852 8528 8533 8690 8524 8869 8747 8511 8922 8552 8558 8916 8520 8886 8576 8905 8590 03 03 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 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 07 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 07 09 10 A G C O F A M N Y S T A T E C H A P INC H V Y ♦ H W Y C O N S T R A G C O F A M N Y S T A T E C H P T R INC 2 0 L U S C O N N C O N S T I N O U S A S S N INC B L D R S E X C H A N G E R O C H E S T E R N Y INC B T E A D I V 4 3 5 C O N S T R C O N T R S C N C L O F W A S H 0 C L U 89 1 C O N T R A C T O R S A S S N OF E P A H V Y ♦ H W Y 5 C N T Y S C O N T R S A S S N OF W E S T C H E S T E R ♦ P U T N A M C N T Y INC G E N L C O N T R S A S S N O F T H E L E H I G H V A L L E Y INC O H I O C O N T R S A S S N A G C O F A M INC OHIO CONTRS ASSN HVY ♦ HWY C L E V E L A N D LU 436 S T E E L + I R O N C O N T R S A S S N ♦ B T E A O F C L E V E 17 W I S C O N S I N R O A D B U I L D E R S A S S N L U 139 A G C O F AM A L A B A M A C H P T R H ♦ R R C O N S T A G M T A G C O F A M INC O R E G O N ♦ C O L U M B I A C H A P T 1 O T H A G C O F A M INC O R E G O N C O L U M B I A C H A P T R S C O N S T R I N D U S O F M A S S INC M A S T E R B U I L D E R S A S S N W E S T E R N P A INC A G C O F A M M O B I L E C H P T R 14 L U S A G C O F AM N Y S T A T E C H A P T E R I NC L U 1 7 C O N T R S A S S N O F W E S T C H C N T Y IN C ♦ 1 O T H E R L 6 0 I-A MI S S O U R I R I V E R BAS I N AG M T G R E A T L A K E S D R E D G E + D O C K C O M P A N Y L U 25 I-A S O U T H E A S T E R N S T A T E S B O I L E R M A K E R EM P L R S Total: 26 a g r e e m e n t s .............. 1,000 8,000 2,500 1,500 1,000 2,000 1,600 1,000 2,500 2,000 2,300 4,000 2,750 8,650 1,500 5,000 5,000 7,000 2,000 1,600 2,100 2,000 2,500 82, 60 0 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 21 21 16 21 50 23 21 23 00 31 31 35 63 90 90 14 23 00 21 21 00 00 00 115 143 115 143 168 531 129 119 531 531 116 129 600 119 531 143 143 600 143 143 112 129 11 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 4 3 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 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 59 40 00 85 84 33 72 14 21 21 31 31 31 21 34 00 35 33 14 34 34 34 30 23 35 31 23 34 34 33 41 34 43 41 34 35 34 21 30 93 10 93 10 43 93 00 93 115 164 143 170 12 7 164 119 115 11 9 115 170 115 170 17 0 100 119 116 116 143 11 6 129 119 106 116 115 170 170 170 170 168 170 127 127 127 164 187 187 170 11 2 147 116 17 0 164 170 187 164 164 2 2 3 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 3 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 C o n s t r u c t i o n — special trade contractors A G C O F AM S O F L A C H P T R + 4 O T H S L U 7 BLORS ASSN OF KANSAS CITY DIST COUNCIL 3 I-A N A T L C O N C R E T E ♦ B L D G P R O D U C T S A G M T M E C H A N I C A L C O N T R S A S S N OF N E W M E X I C O INC N E C A R O C K Y MT C H P T R D E N V E R I N S I D E W I R I N G L 68 P D C A C H I C A G O C H P T R D I S T C O U N C I L 14 A G C O F AM B A T O N R O U G E L U 1 0 9 8 A GC OF MA S S INC ♦ 7 O T H S 9 L U S BLDG T R ADES EMPLRS ASSN W E S T C H E S T E R ♦ PUTNAM BTEA OF W E S T C H E S T E R ♦ P U T N A M C O U N T I E S 7 LUS C L E V E P L U M B I N G C O N T R S A S S N L 55 MASON CONTRS ASSN CLEVELAND LU 5 M E C H C O N T R S A S S N OF C L E V E L U 1 20 M E C H A N I C A L C O N T R S A S S N R O C H E S T E R IN C ♦ 1 O T H A G C O F AM D E T R O I T C H P T R + 1 O T H 3 L U S AG C OF O H I O C I N N D I V D I S T C O U N C I L A L L I E D C O N S T R U C T I O N E M P L O Y E R S A S S N INC L U 8 A S S O C S T E E L E R E C T O R S OF C H I C A G O L U 1 C O N S T R I N D U S T R Y A S S N OF W E S T E R N M A S S INC G R E A T L A K E S F A B R I C A T O R S ♦ E R E C T O R S A S S N L U 25 GREAT LAKES FABRICATORS + ERECTORS ASSN I-A M I L L W R I G H T C O N V E Y O R + M A C H I N E E R E C T O R IL L R E G I O N A L I N S U L A T I O N C O N T R S A S S N L U 17 IRONWORKER EMPL O Y E R S ASSN OF WES T E R N PENN L 3 MASON CONTRS ASSN OF MILWAUKEE + 1 OTH LU 8 M E C H C O N T R S A S S N O F C E N T R A L O H I O INC MECH A N I C A L C O NTRS ASSN OF W P E N N PITTS METRO DETROIT PLUMB ♦ MECH CONTRS ASSN LU 636 M E T R O D E TROIT PLUMB ♦ M E C H C O N T R S A SSN LU 98 M I D - A M R E G I O N A L B A R G A S S N L U 502 M I N N A R E A P L U M B I N G C O N T R S A S S N L U 15 N E C A O F D E T R O I T S O U T H E M I C H L U 58 N E C A ST L O U I S C H A P T LU 1 N E C A ST P A U L C H A P T E R L U 110 P D C A O F A M INC G R D E T R O I T ♦ W A Y N E C H P T R S S M A C C A OF M I L W A U K E E L U 24 S M A C N A M E T R O D E T R O I T C H P T R 6 C N T Y S LU 80 A S S N OF C O N T R G P L U M B E R S OF THE C I T Y OF N Y I-A B O I L E R ♦ T A N K C O N T R S OF CHI R E P A I R WRK L A T H I N G ♦ M E T A L F U R R I N G C O N T R S A S S N C A L I F IN C N O R T H E A S T ERECTORS ASSN ♦ 2 OTH S LU 7 P A C I F I C P I P E C O M P A N Y O F O A K L A N D L U 342 P D C O F E M A S S INC P L U M B I N G C O N T R S A S S N OF M E T R O ST L O U I S L U 35 S M A C C A L OS A N G E L E S CH ♦ 1 O T H A S S N L U 108 U N P A I N T I N G C O N T R S A S S N ♦ 1 O T H L U 79 FLOOR C O V E R I N G ASSN OF SO C A L I F ♦ 3 OTH 1247 S e e footnotes at end of table . 1,000 1,100 1,200 1,100 1,700 7,300 2,000 3,000 4,000 1,200 1,550 2,200 1,500 1,000 5,900 3,300 1,050 2,650 1,500 2,500 2,000 1,100 1,000 2,200 1,200 1,100 1,100 1,800 2,300 1,900 1,300 3,500 2,250 1,200 1,650 1,200 2,200 3,500 1,000 1,000 1,500 1,250 2,500 1,300 3,800 1,200 1,800 AGREE MENT N O* EXP. DATE COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 93 34 34 14 14 00 59 00 23 19 19 19 16 52 32 218 127 100 4 1 1 1,400 5,000 1,000 1,200 2,050 1,950 1,000 1,500 1,400 1,050 2,000 2,100 3,050 1,200 1,000 1,250 2,100 1,000 2,050 1,100 2,000 1,000 2,000 1,900 55,000 6,500 2,550 1,050 1,200 7,700 2,650 2,150 6,000 1,500 3,000 2,150 8,500 8,000 1,650 2,800 1,400 1,450 1,000 1,050 1,000 2,850 1,700 1,650 165,800 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 2G 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 23 95 54 43 22 31 93 43 00 22 93 91 33 23 33 33 21 93 90 91 90 60 92 92 93 93 93 43 93 00 42 00 00 42 35 00 00 00 93 41 00 52 59 33 84 00 23 84 155 480 53 1 531 155 155 108 531 531 155 531 531 155 5 31 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 108 531 531 531 531 531 53 1 480 1 55 155 155 1 55 155 155 155 155 155 155 155 155 15 5 531 531 15 5 531 155 101 1 3 1 1 1 1 3 3 4 1 3 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 4 4 4 2 4 4 2 2 2 3 3 4 1 4 4 1 1 4 4 4 2 1 4 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1,550 1, 5 5 0 21 61 203 1 UNION UNIT C o n s t r u c t i o n — special trade contractors— C o n t i n u e d 8610 8715 8831 8783 8781 8820 8763 8661 8726 08 08 08 08 08 08 09 12 12 A I R C 0 N 0 I T I O N G ♦ R E F R I G C O N T R S A S S N OF SO C A L A S S O C U N D E R G R O U N D C O N T R S INC L U S 3 2 4 A + B A S S O C I A T E D U N D E R G R O U N D C O N T R S INC M A S T E R P L U M B E R S A S S N B O S T O N L U 12 N E C A B O S T O N C H P T R ELE C C O N T R A S S N L U 103 NECA LO U I S V I L L E CHPTR LU 369 NECA SO FLA CHAP WIREMEN AGMT LU 349 I -A N A T L T R A N S I E N T M E M B E R S N E C A INC W E S T E R N PENN C H P T R LU 5 Total: 56 a g r e e m e n t s ..... 1,250 4,000 2,000 1,200 2,500 1,050 2,000 7,000 1,150 •116, 750 170 129 143 170 127 127 127 112 127 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 1 O r d n a n c e and accessories 16 26 27 07 07 11 OLIN CORP NEW HAVEN ♦ BRANFORD LODGE 609 WES T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP AE R O S P A C E DIV LU 1805 ICI U N I T E D S T A T E S INC C H A R L E S T O W N L U S 3 2 0 6 9 2 Total: 3 a g r e e m e n t s ............... . 1,900 1,850 1,700 5, 450 1 ________ F o o d a n d k i n d r e d products 375 262 378 401 255 332 392 311 264 362 260 246 202 230 226 342 307 309 252 394 389 403 258 2 48 253 344 399 23 8 338 200 205 203 217 210 2 11 218 222 223 213 207 208 219 352 329 386 240 209 398 01 01 01 02 02 02 02 02 02 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 09 09 09 09 10 10 10 11 11 12 A M H O M E F O O D S INC L U 38 I-A P I N E A P P L E C O M P A N I E S F A C T O R Y ♦ P L A N T A T I O N S ITT G W A L T N E Y L U 8 2 2 A N H E U S E R - B U S C H INC L U 6 CAM P B E L L SOUP CO C AMDEN A U P - 8 0 C A M P B E L L S O U P CO N A P O L E O N LU 146 I -A B A K E R I E S L O S A N G E L E S L U S 31 ♦ 3 7 I-A B R E W E R I E S A N H E U S E R - B U S H ♦ F A L S T A F F S T O K E L Y - V A N C A M P IN C W I S ♦ M I N N 4 L U S G E N L FOO D S C O R P M A X W E L L H O U S E D I V H O B O K E N 56 I-A D R I E D F R U I T I N D U S T R Y F R E S N O ♦ M A D E R A A S S O C P R O D U C E R S ♦ P A C K E R S INC 4 L U S CHI C A G O MEAT P A C KERS ♦ W H O L E S A L E R S ASSN GRE A T E R PITTS MILK D E A L E R S ASSN LU 205 I-A W H O L E S A L E - R E T A I L M I L K A G R E E M E N T I CE C R E A M C O U N C I L 13 C O S B R E W E R S B O A R D O F T R A D E INC C A L I F B R E W E R S A S S N + O T H E R S L U S 89 3 ♦ 8 9 6 DEL M O N T E C O R P P U T S 126 ♦ 1 2 7 L U S 6 7 0 ♦ 8 09 DEL M O N T E C O R P W H S E ♦ PL T 122 T O P P E N I S H 76 0 O I A M O N D F R U I T G R O W E R S I NC L U 6 7 0 M E M P H I S BA K E R Y E M P L R S A S S N M I S S + T E N N LU 149 A G R I P A C INC J U N C T I O N C I T Y E U G E N E L U 6 7 0 A G R I P A C INC S A L E M ♦ C O R V A L L I S L U 6 7 0 C A L I F P R O C E S S O R S INC FROZEN FOOD EMPLOYERS ASSN WATSONVILLE EMPLRS FROZEN FOOD ASSN I-A A D D E N D U M T O M A S T E R D A I R Y A G M T ST L O U I S I -A D R I E D F R U I T I N D U S T R Y L U 11 ARMOUR + CO MASTER AGMT D U B U Q U E P A C K I N G CO LU 150 GEN HOST CORP C U D A H Y CO C U D A H Y FOODS C O DIV JO H N M O R R E L L ♦ CO M A S T E R AGMT O S C A R M A Y E R ♦ C O D A V E N P O R T P L A N T LU 4 31 O S C A R M A Y E R ♦ CO M A D I S O N P L A N T LU 538 R A T H P A C K I N G CO I O W A TE X NC + GA 6 L U S S W I F T + C O + E S T E C H INC M A S T E R A G M T W I L S O N ♦ C O IN C M A S T E R A G M T F O O D E M P L R S C O U N C I L INC L U 5 6 3 GEO A HORMEL ♦ CO AU S T I N LU P-9 H Y G R A D E FOODS P R O D U C T S CORP 9 LUS S C H U L D E R 8 E R G - K U R D L E C O INC L U 1 1 7 B O R D O C I T R U S P R O D C O O P E R A T I V E W I N T E R H A V E N 60 CHICAGO BAKERY EMPLOYERS LABOR COUNCIL M O N F O R T O F C O L O R A D O INC M O N F O R T P A C K I N G C O G R E A T E R NY M I L K O E A L E R S L A B O R C O M M GRE A T E R PHILA MEAT PACKERS ASSN ♦ OTH E R S A C O L P H COORS CO G OLDEN LU 366 Total: 48 a g r e e m e n t s . ................ Tobacco 505 12 LOEWS CORP manufactures L O R I L L A R D O I V L O U I S V I L L E L U 201 Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t ................... AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 00 54 57 56 63 21 56 20 UNION UNIT Textile mill p roducts 620 602 623 604 644 618 609 621 02 04 04 05 05 07 07 07 M U N S I N G W E A R INC 4 L U S 1,650 D A N R I V E R I NC D A N V I L L E D I V L U 2 4 8 8,000 ROCK HILL P R I N T I N G ♦ F I N I S H I N G CO L U 710 1,600 ERWIN M I L L S INC D U R H A M LU 257 1,200 O L Y M P I A I N D U S INC O L Y M P I A M I L L S D I V L U 1 8 3 0 1,350 A S S N OF K N I T T E D F A B R I C S MFRS INC NYC 2,500 CONE M I LLS C ORP W H ITE OA K P L A N T L U 1391 2,000 U N I T E D K N I T W E A R M F R S L E A G U E INC 8,650 Total: 8 a g r e e m e n t s ................. . 26, 9 5 0 337 202 337 202 337 134 337 134 4 1 1 4 1 2 1 2 1 A p p a r e l a n d other finished produc t s m a d e f r o m fabrics a n d similar m a t e r i a l s 827 830 836 813 847 849 874 862 860 861 871 858 879 876 852 819 826 828 829 824 880 854 831 882 868 820 872 844 01 01 01 02 02 02 02 02 02 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 08 09 11 11 12 27,000 A F F I L I A T E D D R E S S M F R S INC ♦ 2 O T H E R S 4 LUS NEEDLE TRADES EMPLRS ASSN 4 LUS 1,800 33,400 POPULAR PRICE CONTRS ASSN + 1 OTH 5 LUS 3,000 A S S O C G A R M E N T IND U S O F ST L O U I S D R E S S B R A N C H C H I L D R E N S D R E S S C O T DR ♦ S P T S W R C O N T R S GR NYC 3,000 I N D U S A S S N OF J U V E N I L E A P P A R E L M F R S INC 4,500 NATL H A N D E M B R O I D E R Y ♦ N O V E L T Y M F R S A S S N INC 5,000 N E W E N G A P P A R E L M F R S A S S N RI M A S S 4 L O C S 5,500 2,800 P L E A T E R S S T I T C H E R S ♦ E M B R O I D E R E R S A S S N INC 2,000 S C H I F F L I L A C E 4 E M B R O I D E R Y M F R S A S S N INC A S S N O F R A I N A P P A R E L C O N T R S INC L U S 1 0 20 3,500 A T L A N T I C A P P A R E L C O N T R A C T O R S A S S N INC 25,000 1,000 GREATER BLOUSE SKIRT 4 UNDERGARMENT ASSN G R E A T E R B L O U S E S K I R T 4 U N D E R G A R M E N T A S S N INC 15,000 7,350 I N F A N T S A N D C H I L D R E N S C O A T A S S N INC 4 O T H 6,000 LOS A N G ELES C O A T 4 SUIT M FRS ASSN 7,500 N A T L A S S N O F B L O U S E M F R S INC L 2 3 - 2 5 4 10 1,000 N A T L S K I R T 4 S P O R T S W E A R A S S N INC L U S 2 3 - 2 5 1,000 NATL WOMENS NECKWEAR 4 SCARF ASSN 30,000 NY C O A T 4 S U I T A S S N INC NY NJ 4 C O N N 6 L US 5,200 N Y R A I N C O A T M F R S A S S N INC 2,500 B E L T A S S N INC N Y L U 4 0 3,100 NEW ENG S P O R TSWEAR MFRS ASSN 6 LUS 1,500 NATL N E C K W E A R C O N F E R E N C E LUS 250 253 2,450 I - A S P O R T S W E A R A G M T L U S 1 01 4 2 1 3 1,500 G A R M E N T I N D U S T R I E S OF I L L I N O I S C H I C A G O 1,300 IMPERIAL READING CORP LAFOLLETTE DIV LU 14590 3,500 A M M I L L I N E R Y M F R S A S S N INC L U S 24 4 4 2 Total: 28 a g r e e m e n t s ...................... . 2 0 6 , 4 0 0 l_______________ L u m b e r a n d w o o d products, except furniture 1003 1026 05 11 P O T L A T C H CORP SOUTHERN D WARREN LU 5-484 M A S O N I T E CORP H A R D B O A R D DIV LAUREL LU 5-443 Total: 2 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... 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 00 00 21 21 21 10 21 22 21 23 21 00 00 93 21 00 21 00 21 21 14 21 93 30 62 20 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 202 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 305 134 134 335 142 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 3 2 1 2 1,000 1,600 2, 600 24 24 71 64 343 343 4 1 1,500 1,000 1,400 1,500 1,250 2,200 1,000 1,200 3,500 14,550 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 64 33 52 31 21 93 35 00 00 119 205 312 335 119 205 119 205 205 1 2 4 1 2 2 4 4 4 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 90 93 90 35 35 12 35 74 527 244 527 231 23 1 231 100 231 4 2 4 1 4 4 4 1 1 Furn i t u r e a n d fixtures 1128 1119 1112 1108 1131 1105 1113 1132 1103 01 05 05 06 06 06 07 08 10 D E S O T O I NC M P I I N D U S T R I E S D J A C K S O N L U 3 0 3 1 C H I C A G O F U R N I T U R E M F R S A S S N L U 18 EASTERN PRODUCTS CORP 3 PLANTS GF B U S I N E S S E Q U I P M E N T INC Y O U N G S T O W N M A N U F A C T U R I N G W O O D W R K S A S S N GR N Y + 1 O T H UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE MFRS ASSN OF CALIF AM H O S P S U P P L Y C O R P H A M I L I N D U S D I V L U 1533 F L E X S T E E L I N D U S T R I E S INC IOWA PA ♦ T E X 3 L US SIMMONS CO MASTER MULTI-PLANT AGMT Total: 9 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... 1____________ P a p e r a n d allied p roducts 1283 1291 1301 1202 1203 1204 1200 1205 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 05 FIBREBOARD CORP 8 MILLS 9 LOCALS WEST COAST ENVELOPE EMPLRS COUNCIL WEYERHAEUSER CO 5 MILLS 6 LUS AM C A N CO G R E E N BAY MILL LU S 327 4 AM C A N CO 6 P L A N T S L U S 148 2 1 7 22 4 B R O W N C O 4 B R O W N - N E W H A M P S H I R E INC C O N S O L P A P E R S INC + C O N S O W E L D C O R P C H A M P I O N INTL C O R P C H A M P I O N P A P E R S CALIF 213 1104 L U 75 9 LUS DIV L 305 2,400 1,200 2,200 1,000 2,150 1,650 2,800 1,100 AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY EXP. OATE NUMBER OF WORKERS AND LOC A T I O N 1 CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 00 35 35 91 11 11 23 90 23 62 72 56 35 62 00 56 31 100 500 231 527 231 10 0 231 244 231 100 2 31 231 231 2 31 231 100 231 4 1 1 1 1 4 1 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 4 4 1 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 21 14 21 00 21 53 33 23 41 20 35 21 34 243 243 243 323 243 323 243 243 243 243 24 3 243 243 2 1 2 4 2 1 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 21 54 62 22 31 32 00 85 34 23 54 22 22 22 21 21 52 54 57 31 54 21 62 22 22 121 50 0 500 357 500 357 121 121 357 314 335 357 357 357 335 335 337 337 337 335 231 500 202 500 121 1 1 1 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 1 4 4 1 4 1 1 1 1 4 1 4 4 1 1 29 74 500 4 P a p e r a n d allied pr o d u c t s — C o n t i n u e d 1215 1219 1217 1226 1225 1209 1211 1249 1265 1257 1247 1293 1231 1218 1277 1275 1300 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 09 10,600 INTL PAPER CO SOUTH E R N KRAFT 0IV INTERSTATE K I M B E R L Y - C L A R K CORP N E E N A H FILTER PLT + MILL 1,000 K I M B E R L Y - C L A R K CORP N E E N A H MILL LU 482 1,300 1,500 L O N G V I E W F I B R E CO L O N G V I E W M I L L L U 153 1,800 ETHYL CO R P O X F O R D P A PER CO DI V R U M F O R D LU 900 2,250 GREAT N O R THERN PAPER CO 2 M I L L I N O C K E T MILLS 1,400 H A M M E R M I L L P A PER CO ERIE DIV LU 620 5,000 I-A W E S T COAST P ♦ P C O N V E R T INDUS MUL T I P L E 1,900 P H I L A D E L P H I A C O N T A I N E R ASSN L U 375 1,000 BOWATERS SOUTHERN PAPER CORP CALHOUN 1,050 C R O W N Z E L L E R B A C H CORP B O G A L U S A MILL LU 189 1,000 F E D E R A L P A PER BOARD CO R I E G E L W O O D L 738 1,300 H A M M E R M I L L P A PER CO T H I L M A N Y PULP + P A P E R D I V 1,250 KIMBERLY-CLARK CORPORATION MEMPHIS 1,200 WESTV A C O CORP CONTAINER 8 LUS W E Y E R H A E U S E R CO P L Y M O U T H LUS 356 423 ♦ 415 1,350 2,000 C H A M P I O N INTL C O R P C H A M P I O N P A P E R S D I V Total: 25 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . 5 1 , 4 0 0 Printing, publishing, a n d allied industries 1433 1447 1456 1438 1428 1451 1411 1418 1435 1419 1446 1423 1429 01 02 02 02 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 05 08 P H O T O - E N G R A V E R S B D O F T R A D E O F N Y I NC 1,200 1,200 NATL BLANK BOOK CO HOLYOKE MASS LU 48-B P R I N T I N G I N D U S T R I E S O F M E T R O N Y INC L U 4 3 B 1,300 TIME INC LU 3 1,000 1,400 E D I T I O N B O O K B I N D E R S O F N Y INC L U 25 W A S H P O S T C O L U 35 1,250 C H I C A G O L I T H O G R A P H E R S ASSN LU 245 5,000 G R A P H I C A R T S A S S N OF D E L A W A R E V A L L E Y INC 1 4 - L 1,200 I-A P R I N T I N G I N D U S T R Y O F T W I N C I T I E S L U 2 2 9 1,700 M E T R O L I T H O G R A P H E R S A S S N INC L U l 4,000 MILWAUKEE LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN MILWAUKEE L 277 1,600 P R I N T I N G I N D U S OF M E T R O N Y I N C L U 1 1 9 B 3,500 G R A P H I C A R T S A S S N O F M I C H INC L U 20-B 1,400 Total: 13 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . 2 5 , 7 5 0 _________________________________________ 1l_________ C h e m i c a l s a n d allied p roducts 1643 1632 1690 01 01 02 1613 1681 1650 1649 1695 1646 1639 1693 1685 1645 1641 1601 1659 1629 1627 1628 1603 1678 1610 1663 1647 1602 02 02 03 03 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 09 10 11 12 AM C Y A N A M I D CO L E O E R L E L A B S DIV LU 143 O U P O N T El DE N E M O U R S + C O M A R T I N S V I L L E O U P O N T El D E N E M O U R S + C O T E X T I L E F I B E R S 1,500 3,200 DEPT 2,500 NL I N D U S INC T I T A N I U M P I G M E N T D I V S A Y R E V I L L E 1,100 2,300 P R O C T E R ♦ G A M B L E CO 1,050 L E V E R B R O T H E R S CO H A M M O N D 7 - 3 3 6 3,200 LE V E R B R O T H E R S CO M A S T E R I N T E R S T A T E 1,000 K E R R - M C G E E CORP GRANTS U R A N I U M OPER LU 2-708 1,000 P A R K E D A V I S ♦ CO D E T R O I T A L L E N P ARK R O C H E S T E R R O H M ♦ H A A S C O B R I S T O L L U 88 1,000 1,000 H E R C U L E S INC H O P E W E L L 2 ,200 S Q U I B B E R + SONS NEW BR U N S W I C K L A W R E NCEVLE 2,200 S Q U I B B ER ♦ S O N S INC P + M L U 8 - 4 3 8 U N I O N CARBIDE CORP C H E M I C A L S ♦ PLASTIC DIV 1,150 1,300 A L L I E D CHEM CORP INDUS CH E M D S Y RACUSE WKS 1,050 A L L I E D CHE M I C A L C ORP SPEC C H E M D B U F F A L O DYE C E L A N E S E C O R P A M C E L L E P L A N T L U 1874 2,200 1,800 CELANESE CORP CELCO PLANT NARROWS LU 2024 1,400 C E L A N E S E CORP CE L R I V E R P L A N T LU 1093 DIAMOND SHAMROCK CORP DIAMOND SHAMROCK CHEM 1,000 1,100 H E R C U L E S INC C O V I N G T O N P L A N T L U 8 8 4 1,200 H O O K E R C H E M + P L A S T I C C O R P N I A G A R A F A L L S PL 3,800 A M E R I C A N ENKA CORP L O W L A N D L U 815 C O L G A T E - P A L M O L I V E CO JERSEY C I T Y PLT 1,450 1,500 A M C Y A N A M I D C O B O U N O B R O O K L U 111 Total: 25 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... • 4 2 , 2 0 0 _________________________________ 1_________ P e t r o l e u m refining a n d related industries 1808 04 EXXON CORP E X XON CO USA DIV B A Y T O W N | Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t .......................... . i 1,050 1 , 050 AGREE MENT NO* COMPANY EXP • DATE AN0 LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 00 00 00 00 00 21 32 52 31 00 84 74 31 61 31 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 l 1 1 31 31 31 31 31 31 31 21 00 00 00 00 33 35 305 334 188 334 188 155 188 2 4 4 1 1 1 4 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 33 00 41 31 62 00 00 121 174 357 137 107 174 174 1 4 1 2 1 3 2 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 10 63 35 55 93 00 54 54 62 63 35 00 12 7 161 218 357 161 500 335 335 335 335 553 161 4 1 1 1 2 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 UNION UNIT R u b b e r a n d mi s c e l l a n e o u s plastics products 1903 1906 1908 1912 1905 1933 1930 1907 1910 1900 1919 1934 1904 1936 1935 04 04 04 04 05 06 06 06 06 07 08 08 09 10 10 FIRESTONE TIRE + RUBBER CO MASTER AGMT 17,450 G O O D R I C H BF C O 7 L U S 10,500 G O O D Y E A R T I R E ♦ R U B B E R C O 15 L U S 23,750 U N I R O Y A L IN C NATIONWIDE P ♦ M 16,000 GE N L TIR E + R U B B E R CO O H I O ♦ T E X A S 9 ♦ 312 3,000 DUNLOP TIRE ♦ RUBBER C0RP BUFFALO 1,100 G E N E R A L T I R E ♦ R U B B E R C O IND P R O D S D I V W A B A S H 1,300 K E L L Y - S P R I N G F I E L D T I R E C O C U M B E R L A N D L 26 2,100 MANSFIELD TIRE + RUBBER CO M A N S F I E L D L U 17 1,500 A R M S T R O N G R U B B E R CO M A S T E R AGM T 4 L U S 3,750 G A T E S R U B B E R CO D E N V E R L 154 3,800 KELLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRE CO TYLER 1,250 GENL MOTORS CORP INLAND MFG OIV DAYTON LU87 5,000 GENL TIRE ♦ R U B B E R CO P + M M A Y F I E L D LU 665 1,300 R U B B E R M A I D INC W O O S T E R L U 302 1,250 Total: 15 a g r e e m e n t s ........................ . 9 3 , 0 5 0 _________________________________ Ii_________ L e a t h e r a nd leather p r o ducts 2117 2104 2105 2109 2110 2131 2116 03 07 07 09 09 11 12 F U L T O N C N T Y G L O V E M F R S INC ♦ B L O C K C U T M F R S 1,200 BROWN SHOE CO 4,000 B R OWN SHOE CO 6,000 I N T E R C O I NC A R K A N S A S M I S S O U R I + I L L I N O I S 6,450 I N T E R C O I NC M I S S O U R I I L L I N O I S ♦ K E N T U C K Y 3,150 C H I C A G O R A W H I D E M F G C O E L G I N D LU 221 1,300 W E Y E N B E R G S H O E M F G CO M I L W A U K E E 4 L U S 1,200 Total: 7 a g r e e m e n t s ........................ . 2 3 , 3 0 0 1 _________ Stone, clay, glass, a n d con c r e t e p r o ducts 2336 2345 2337 2342 2367 2328 2330 03 05 08 09 09 10 11 J O H N S - M A N V I L L E P R O D U C T S C O R P W A U K E G A N L U 60 1,000 1,850 A M S T A N D A R D INC L U 8 9 ♦ 6 O T H S 3M C O M P A N Y L U 6 - 7 5 2,400 ILLUMINATING ♦ ALLIED GLASSWARE MFRS ASSN 1,400 3M C O M P A N Y LU 222 1,000 I— A C H I N A W A R E M A N U F A C T U R E R S G R O U P 1,700 U S P O T T E R S A S S N PA O H I O WVA 3,500 Total: 7 a g r e e m e n t s ........................ • ■ 12, 850 1 ________ P r i m a r y m e t a l industries 2658 2632 2618 2548 2559 2643 2652 2567 2665 2624 2626 2664 01 01 02 02 03 03 04 04 04 06 11 12 AM I N S U L A T E D WIRE C O R P ♦ N E C A B L E C O R P 1,200 1,100 C E N T R A L F O U N D R Y C O H O L T L 311 I A 0 I S H C O C U O A H Y L 1862 1,850 1,000 UNION CARBIDE CORP FERROALLOYS DIV LU 3-89 C A L I F M E T A L T R A D E S AS S N F O U N D R Y DIV L U 164 2,500 1,000 ESCO CORP L Y N C H B U R G FND R Y CO R A D F O R D PLT LU 296 9 1,100 1 ,800 LYNCHBURG FNDRY CO LYNCHBURG LU 2556 1,150 N O AM R O Y A L T I E S INC W H E L A N D F O U N D R Y D I V S T O C K H A M V A L V E S ♦ F I T T I N G S INC B I R M I N G H A M 1,750 1,000 EVANS PRODUCTS CO RA C I N E STEEL C A S T I N G S DIV 5,600 MF R S INDUS RELS ASSN Total: 12 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... • • 2 1 , 0 5 0 F a b r i c a t e d m e t a l products, except ordnanc e , machinery, 1________ a n d transportation e q u i p m e n t 2906 2972 2908 2980 2923 2930 2920 2982 04 05 05 06 07 07 07 12 1,600 EMHART CORP BERLIN PLANT HARDWARE DIV 1,350 S O C A L I F S T E E L F A B R I C A T O R S L U 92 2,600 S T A N L E Y WORKS NE W B R I T A I N L 1433 1,200 MASTER LOCK CO MILWAUKEE LU 469 3,100 BABCOCK ♦ WI L C O X CO POWER G E N E R A T I O N GROUP 1,800 H O L L O W M E T A L D O O R ♦ B U C K A S S N INC 1,950 TRANE COMPANY L A C R O S S E L U 21 1,200 INTL T E L E ♦ TEL E C O R P ITT G E N E R A L C O N T R O L S Total: 8 a g r e e m e n t s ...... ................. • 1 4 , 8 0 0 3291 3373 03 03 ADMIRAL CORP M IDWEST MFG DIV LU 2063 FMC CORP CRANE ♦ EXCAVATOR DIV CEDAR 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 16 93 16 35 31 20 35 93 218 112 218 553 112 119 218 127 1 2 4 1 1 2 1 4 35 35 33 42 218 553 1 1 M a c h i n e r y , except electrical RAPIDS 3,200 1,100 AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND Machinery, 3273 3381 3374 3234 3269 3266 3279 3358 3287 3258 3344 3382 3294 3384 3230 3253 3348 3380 3222 3274 3383 3226 3225 3360 3343 3351 3311 3326 3293 3332 3386 3215 3216 3392 03 03 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 07 08 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 10 10 10 10 11 11 11 12 NUMBER OF WORKERS LOCATION1 CODES2 UNION SIC STATE 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 35 35 35 21 16 74 35 16 14 16 32 41 30 21 35 31 21 00 31 00 35 00 32 47 00 00 74 14 46 21 47 31 00 32 35 33 33 347 218 100 335 553 335 553 335 127 218 100 107 347 218 335 354 553 218 553 335 500 553 553 335 335 107 187 218 347 553 553 553 553 196 1 4 1 1 4 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 4 1 1 4 4 1 4 4 1 1 1 1 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 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 33 33 71 22 42 33 33 74 43 16 14 34 33 59 35 33 31 35 00 00 93 32 21 23 35 71 00 93 00 23 21 00 00 41 32 218 218 553 127 127 127 218 347 347 127 347 218 218 127 553 187 127 218 484 347 12 7 107 127 553 484 347 484 21 8 127 127 127 50 0 347 531 553 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 4 1 4 4 4 l 4 2 1 1 1 4 1 4 1 1 4 4 4 1 UNIT except electrical— C o n t i n u e d 1 ,600 I N G E R S O L L - R A N D CO P A I N T E D PO S T LU 313 1,100 NE W B R I T A I N M A C H I N E D I V L U 1021 1,800 L U F K I N I N D U S T R I E S INC L U S 5 8 7 1 9 9 9 ♦ 4 2 9 1,250 R E X N 0 R D INC W E S T M I L W A U K E E 0 P E R S L U 1 5 2 7 3,500 T E X T R O N I NC F A F N I R B E A R I N G D I V L U 1 3 3 1,350 W H I T I N M A C H I N E W O R K S I NC WHITINSVILLE 2,500 INGERSOLL - RAND T O R R I N G T O N CO LU 1645 1,150 RELIANCE ELEC CO DOOGE MFG DIV MISHAWAKA 3,200 S P E R R Y R A N D C O R P U N I V A C DI V ST P A U L L U 2 0 4 7 1,000 B E L O I T C O R P P A P E R M A C H I N E R Y D I V LU 1197 1,100 CHIC PNEU M A T I C TOOL CO UTICA 1,000 CHRYSLER OUTBOARD CORP HARTFORD ♦ BEAVER DAM 3,400 COPELAND CORPORATION 3 LOCALS 1,000 NATL C A S H R E G I S T E R CO DAT A E N T R Y D ITHACA 2,400 B U C Y R U S - E R I E C O IND P A W I S 1,300 A C M E - C L E V E L A N D C O R P N A T L A C M E C O D I V L U 19 36,050 C A T E R P I L L A R T R A C T O R C O T O W M O T O R C O R P SUB 1,000 D E E R E + C O J O H N D E E R E H O R I C O N W K S L U 873 22,400 D E ERE AND CO IOWA AND I L L I N O I S 2,800 FMC CORP BEARING + CHAIN DIVS INDIANAPOLIS 1,500 HESSTON CORP HESSTON 36,500 INTL H A R V E S T E R CO M A I N LABOR A G M T P R O D - M A I N T 2,200 INTL H A R V E S T E R CO C L E R I C A L + T E C H N I C A L 1,200 RE E D TOOL CO D R I L L I N G E Q U I P M E N T DIV L U 2083 1,15 0 R O C K W E L L INTL C O R P D R A P E R 0 H O P E D A L E 2 LUS 1,300 SPERRY RAND CORP SPERRY VICKERS DIV OMAHA 4,200 C A R R I E R CORP LU 527 2,250 C E S S N A A I R C R A F T C O H U T C H I N S O N L U 1992 3,150 C H R Y S L E R CORP DAYTON PLANTS 1 + 2 LU 775 2,500 M A S S E Y - F E R G U S O N INC M A S T E R 4 L U S 1,050 A L L I S - C H A L M E R S CORP LA PORTE PLT LU 1 319 3,800 A L L I S - C H A L M E R S CORP W E S T A L L I S PLT LU 248 2,050 F I A T - A L L I S C O N S T M A C H INC S P R I N G F I E L D LU 1027 1,200 F E C D E R S CORP E F F I N G H A M P L A N T LU 105 Total: 36 a g r e e m e n t s ...................... . 1 5 9 , 2 5 0 L Electrical m a c h i n e r y , 3748 3641 3790 3775 3651 3668 3667 3710 3624 3643 3707 3642 3762 3789 3792 3716 3764 3794 3618 3617 3714 3709 3645 3776 3609 3744 3627 3630 3625 3626 3740 3629 3628 3783 3769 01 01 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 08 equ i p m e n t , NATL UN I O N ELEC CORP EUREKA WILLI A M S CO DIV S U N B E A M CORP S U N B E A M A P P L I A N C E CO DIV F R A N K L I N E L E C T R I C CO INC J A C K S O N V I L L E L U 1000 C I R C L E F I N D U S T R I E S INC L U 1 2 7 3 C O L L I N S R A DIO CO 2 P L A N T S LU 1362 GTE A U T O M A T I C ELEC CO N O R T H L A K E LU 713 GTE A U T O M A T I C ELEC CO N O R T H L A K E D I S T 8 R O C K W E L L INTL C O R P C O L L I N S R A D I O G R O U P D A L L A S WAGNER ELECTRIC CORP ST L O U I S L U 1 1 0 4 A R R O W - H A R T IN C H A R T F O R D ♦ D A N I E L S O N L U 1 0 1 3 S P R AGUE ELECTRIC CO NORTH ADAMS PLTS L 200 WHIRLPOOL CORP ST J O S E P H D I V P L T S L U 1 9 1 8 GENL ELEC CO B A L L A S T DEPT DANVI L L E GENL ELEC CO BATTERY PROD GAI N E S V I L L E LU 2156 G E N L ELEC CO D I S H W A S H E R ♦ D I S P O S A L D M I L W 261 G E N L E L E C T R I C CO C H I C A G O ♦ C I C E R O P L T S L 571 GENL ELECTRIC CO EUCLID LAMP PLT CLEVELAND GENL E L E C T R I C CO M E D I C A L S Y S T E M S DE P T MIL W GENL EL E C T R I C CO NA T L AGMT GE N L ELE C T R I C CO NATL AGMT G T E L E N K U R T INC M A G N A V O X CO FORT WA Y N E LU 254 M F R S O F I L L U M I N A T I O N P R O D U C T S INC N Y L U 3 P H I L C O - F O R D CORP E L E C T R O N I C S D L A N SDALE 1695 A L L E N - B R A D L E Y CO M I L W A U K E E L U 1 1 1 1 W A R W I C K E L E C T R O N I C S INC F O R R E S T C I T Y L 1 1 0 6 W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP SUNNYVALE LU 93 W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP W E S T I N G H O U S E E L E C C O R P B E A V E R P L A N T L U 201 W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC C ORP E L E C T R O N I C TUBE D 1833 W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP W E S T I N G H O U S E ELEC CORP W H I R L P O O L C O R P ST P A U L D I V L U 8 2 7 D E S I G N ♦ M F G C O R P C O N N E R S V I L L E L U 151 a n d supplies T 2,000 2,000 1,000 1,150 4,350 5,000 1,400 1,300 3,000 1,200 1,150 1,700 1,100 1,300 1,800 3,200 1,000 1,400 17,500 85,000 1,600 1,500 2,200 3,000 5,300 1,600 6,800 1,000 1,000 1,900 1,550 13,600 33,000 1,850 1,300 AGREE MENT NC. EXP. DATE COMPANY AN0 LOCATION1 Electrical m a c h i n e r y , 3780 3731 3706 3782 3747 3795 3732 3767 3693 3647 3694 3734 3660 08 08 09 09 09 10 11 12 12 12 12 12 12 4113 4097 4134 4048 4154 4099 4058 4127 4128 4142 4181 4087 4160 4076 4001 4008 4009 4007 4010 4019 4182 4104 4022 4018 4169 4028 4092 4042 4017 4015 01 03 03 04 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 08 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 10 10 10 10 10 11 12 equi p m e n t , NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 UNION UNIT SIC STATE 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 21 43 61 00 31 31 33 56 93 21 22 32 00 553 500 107 347 127 127 127 346 119 127 500 119 127 1 4 1 4 1 1 1 1 4 2 4 1 4 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 23 63 54 16 32 11 47 31 31 59 93 21 23 31 30 00 00 00 00 00 34 16 00 31 00 00 31 34 00 00 112 320 112 553 553 320 218 553 218 112 119 218 500 553 553 553 553 553 553 553 500 500 553 354 461 553 500 553 553 553 1 1 4 1 4 4 4 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 1 4 1 4 4 4 1 4 4 a n d supplies— C o n t i n u e d E A G L E ELEC M F G CO INC ♦ EA G L E P L A S T I C S L 365 M C G R A W - E 0 I S 0 N C O B U S S M A N 0 I V ST L O U I S GENL ELEC CO TUBE 0EP T O W E N S B O R O LU 783 GENL MOTORS C0RP GTE SYLV A N I A LU 1654 OTTAWA SM I T H A 0 ELEC T R I C MOTOR DI V L U 1977 L I T T O N I N D U S T R I E S INC J E F F E R S O N E L E C T R I C D I V G T E S Y L V A N I A INC S M I T H F I E L D H U G H E S A I R C R A F T CO LU 1553 N Y L A M P ♦ S H A D E M F R S A S S N INC L U 3 R A D I O C O R P OF AM N E W J E R S E Y U N I T S 1 2 3 RCA CORP LU 3154 M O N T I C E L L O R C A C O R P N A T L A G M T 10 L U S Total: 48 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... 1,500 1,000 2,150 25,000 1,750 1,000 1,000 1,650 8,000 1,700 2,350 1,050 17,500 280,400 * Transportation equipment SUN SHIPBLDG ♦ DRY DOCK CO P + M EES LU 802 3,200 ALA B A M A DRY D OCK + S H I P B U I L D I N G C O MOBILE 2,000 N O R FOLK S H I P B U I L D I N G ♦ D RYDOCK CORP L U 684 1,000 AVCO CORP AVCO LYCOMING DIV STRATFORD PLANT 2,000 AM M O T O R S C O R P AM G E N E R A L C O R P 1,500 BATH IRON WORKS CORP BATH + BRUN S W I C K 1,600 CESSNA AIRCRAFT CO WALLACE-PAWNEE DIV 9,000 G ENL E L E C T R I C CO E V E N D A L E LU 647 3,800 GE N L ELE C T R I C CO EV E N O A L E 1,400 J A C K S O N V I L L E S H I P Y A R D S INC L U 805 1,900 SUMMA CORP H U GHES H E L I C O P T E R S D I V LU 1553 1,500 F A I R C H I L D I N D U S T R I E S INC F A R M I N G D A L E L 1 9 8 7 1,000 T R W I NC H A R R I S B U R G L U 1 4 0 0 1,250 GOODYEAR AEROSPACE CORP AKRON 2,000 A M M O T O R S C O R P N A T L E C O N A G M T + S U P P S 7 4 ♦ 75 10,000 CHRYSLER CORP OFF ♦ CLERICAL 4,500 CHRYSLER CORP PARTS DEPOTS 2,550 C H R Y S L E R C O R P P R O D U C T I O N - M A I N T E N C E 43 LUS 115,000 CHRYSLER CORPORATION ENGINEERING 5,300 FORD MOTOR CO 170,000 F O R D MOTOR CO BODY E N G I N E E R I N G D E A R B O R N 1,050 GENERAL DYNAMICS CORP ELECTRIC BOAT 1,800 GENL MOTORS CORP 420,000 E A T O N C O R P A X L E D I V L U 21 1,350 GENL MOTORS CORP PLT PROTECTION EMPS 2,600 MAC K T R U C K INC M A S T E R SHOP AG M T 8,000 TRW INC T A P C O - V A L V E S - M A I N P L A N T - R E P L A C E M E N T 5,100 T R W IN C V A N D Y K E P L A N T S T E R L I N G H E I G H T S 1,100 EATON CORP 6 PLANT DIVS 3,300 DANA CORP TOLEDO DISTRIBUTION CENTER 9,500 Total: 30 a g r e e m e n t s ........................ |794, 300 Professional, ' 4 428 4402 4418 4420 4424 01 03 06 06 10 4600 4615 4607 4609 4611 02 03 06 06 11 5022 5015 5029 02 03 03 scientific, a n d controlling instruments; p h o tographic a n d optical g o o d s ; w a t c h e s a n d clocks B U L O V A M A T C H C O INC 2,000 SUN C H E M I C A L CORP K O L L S M A N INST R U M E N T CO DIV 1,100 GAF C O R P B I N G H A M T O N LU 306 1.400 GENL TIME CORP WESTCLOX DIV PERU LU 12573 1.400 JOHNSON ♦ JOHNSON CHICAGO LU 1437 1,500 Total: 5 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... .. 7 , 4 0 0 I M i s c e l l a n e o u s m a n u f a c t u r i n g industries 38 38 38 38 38 J E W E L R Y M F R S AS S N INC LU 1 NY NJ ♦ C O N N 2,600 39 M A T T E L INC 3 L U S 2,000 39 N A T L A S S N OF DOLL M F R S INC L U 223 8,000 39 S T U F F E D T O Y M F R S A S S N I NC L 2 2 3 1,300 39 A R M S T R O N G C O R K CO L A N C A S T E R F L O O R P L A N T 285 39 1,900 Total: 5 a g r e e m e n t s ........................ . .15, 8 0 0 ____________________________________________________________________ 1 L o c a l a n d s u b u r b a n transit a n d interurban p a s s e n g e r transportation TRANSPORT OF N J 8 LUS 3,100 1,150 M I L W A U K E E + S U B U R B A N T R A N S P O R T CORP L U 998 YELLOW CAB CO OF PHILADELPHIA 1,600 Total: 3 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . . 5 , 8 5 0 41 41 41 21 21 21 33 33 500 218 121 335 337 4 4 4 1 4 00 93 20 00 23 146 333 221 221 333 2 4 2 2 1 22 35 23 197 197 531 4 ^ 1 1 AGREE MENT N O* EXP. DATE COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT 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 42 42 42 00 93 33 33 23 50 50 00 00 00 93 30 33 00 50 50 00 10 20 10 21 21 00 00 00 00 54 54 00 00 00 00 00 74 93 23 00 33 91 31 33 00 00 21 00 20 90 50 00 00 00 531 531 531 531 531 53 1 531 531 531 531 531 531 542 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 218 531 531 531 500 531 531 531 218 531 5 31 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 335 53 1 531 3 2 2 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 3 3 1 4 2 2 2 2 4 1 4 3 4 3 1 2 4 4 3 3 2,000 1,000 3. 000 44 44 20 00 321 321 2 2 1,600 1,300 2,050 2,800 11,250 1,250 1,800 3,300 48 48 48 48 48 48 48 48 35 00 32 90 00 21 33 95 346 352 346 127 201 346 127 127 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 M o t o r freight transportation a n d w a r e h o u s i n g 5282 5200 5221 5203 5 2 48 5212 5211 5262 5213 5214 5216 5219 5222 5273 5229 5244 5276 5224 5215 5223 5225 5226 5233 5234 5235 5232 5227 5228 5266 5247 5265 5263 5264 5275 5260 5243 5242 5205 5239 5278 5271 5283 5209 5281 5272 5240 5231 5255 5270 5218 5254 02 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 05 05 06 06 07 07 08 11 11 I— A S O C 0 N F V A R I O U S T A N K C A R L I N E C O S CALIF TRUCKING ASSN 9 LUS C E N T R A L M O T O R F R E I G H T A S S N IN C L O C A L 7 1 0 C E N T R A L M O T O R F R E I G H T A S S N INC H W Y D R I V E R S C E N T R A L P E N N M O T O R C A R R I E R S C O N F E R E N C E IN C I-A C A R O L I N A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L 0 - T - R SUPP A G M T I - A C A R O L I N A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L C I T Y C A R T A G E SU P I— A C E N T R A L S T A T E S I R O N - S T E E L S P E C C O M M D A G M T I-A C E N T R A L S T A T E S A R E A O V E R - T H E - R O A D I- A C E N T R A L S T A T E S A R E A L O C A L C A R T A G E I-A H O U S E H O L D GOODS ♦ M O V I N G S T O RAGE 7 LUS I-A J O I N T AREA C A R T A G E A G R E E M E N T I-A L O C A L C A R T A G E A G M T FOR H I R E + PRI C A R R I E S I-A M A S T E R R A I L - T R U C K F R E I G H T A G R E E M E N T I-A M D - D C C I T Y P I C K U P ♦ D E L I V E R Y S UPP A G M T I-A M D - D C O - T - R S U P P A G M T I -A N A T L M A S T E R F R E I G H T A G M T P H I L A ♦ V I C I N I T Y I-A N E W E N G L A N D F R E I G H T SUPP A G M T I-A N J - N Y A R E A GENL T R U C K I N G S UPP A G M T I-A NO NEW E N G L A N D GENL F R E I G H T A G M T SUPP I-A NY S T A T E T E A M S T E R S F R E I G H T D I V 0 - T - R I -A N Y S T A T E T E A M S T E R S F R E I G H T O I V L O C A L C A R T I-A SO CONF L O CAL F R E I G H T F O R W A R D I N G P I C K U P I-A S O C O N F L O C A L F R E I G H T F O R W A R D I N G OFF E E S I-A S O C O N F L O C A L F R E I G H T F O R W A R D I N G G A R A G E I-A SO CONF 0 - T - R M O T O R F R E I G H T SUPP AGMT I -A V A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L C I T Y P I C K U P ♦ D E L I V E R Y I -A V A F R E I G H T C O U N C I L 0 - T - R S U P P A G M T I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A A U T O M O T I V E S H O P - T R U C K I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S T R U C K I N G M A I N T E N A N C E I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A O F F I C E SUPP I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A O V E R T HE R O A D SUPP I -A W E S T E R N S T A T E S A R E A L O C A L C A R T A G E S U P P M E R C H A N T S F A S T M O T O R L I N E S INC U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC N O C A L I F WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIERS LOCAL CARTAGE SUP WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIERS 0-T-R AGMT C A R T A G E E X C H A N G E O F C H I C A G O IN C O T H E R S T R U C K O W N E R S A S S N O F S E A T T L E INC 174 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E I N C N O + SO O H I O 50 L U S U N I T E D PARCEL SERVICE C H I C A G O LU 705 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC 3,250 2,800 2,000 6,500 9,900 6,350 6,700 25,000 40,000 120,000 2,000 2,400 10,000 3,500 4,000 1,000 10,500 1,600 38,000 1,700 12,000 8,000 20,000 1,500 2,500 10,500 1,300 1,400 7,600 3,200 14,300 26,500 43,900 1,000 1,800 4,200 2,800 3,200 1,500 1,600 3,500 13,200 I-A NA T L M A S T E R A U T O M O B I L E T R A N S P O R T E R S A G M T 4,850 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E U P S T A T E N Y D I S T 12 L U S 1,700 I-A M A S T E R C E M E N T ♦ ALL D R Y B U L K C O M M O D I T I E S 1,250 2,000 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC L U 1 7 7 O R E G O N DRAYMEN + W A R E H O U S E M E N S ASSN 2,500 1,000 U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC A T L A N T I C A R E A 2 0 LO B O W M A N T R A N S P O R T A T I O N I NC 0 - T - R ♦ P I C K UP ? 1,400 I-A C E N T R A L S T A T E S A R E A TAN K T R U C K AGMT 8,000 I-A E A S T E R N A R E A T A N K H A U L 3,000 Total: 51 a g r e e m e n t s ...................... . 508, 400 W a t e r transportation 5414 5412 5718 5782 5717 5770 5778 5777 5791 5798 03 03 i----------01 03 04 06 07 07 10 10 MARINE MARINE TOWING ♦ TRANSP EMPLRS ASSN OPERS TUG T O W I N G * TRA N S P E M PLRS ASSN OIL TANKRS Total: 2 a g r e e m e n t s .......................... Communication GENL TELEPHONE CO OF WISCONSIN N A T L B R O A D C A S T I N G C O INC M A S T E R G E N L T E L E P H O N E C O O F I N D INC G E N L T E L E C O O F T H E N O R T H W E S T INC L U 8 9 WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO NATL W E S T E R N U N I O N T E L E G R A P H CO G E N L T E L E C O O F ILL S E R C O N S T ♦ S U P P L Y D E P T S H A W A I I A N T E L E P H O N E CO L U 1357 AGREE MENT NO. EXP. OAT E COMPANY ANO L O C A T I O N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS COOES2 SIC STATE 48 48 93 00 102 531 3 4 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 80 95 93 00 91 93 23 23 33 59 31 71 16 74 23 00 53 35 21 21 31 23 63 33 00 31 35 61 34 93 93 93 127 127 127 127 127 100 127 127 118 127 127 127 127 127 127 357 500 127 127 127 342 500 127 531 118 342 129 500 118 127 319 127 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 1 4 1 4 4 4 4 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 41 93 93 93 93 93 93 00 30 531 531 480 400 531 531 531 553 531 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 3 52 52 93 34 531 531 2 2 53 53 53 53 53 53 53 34 21 21 23 14 50 21 305 332 332 184 184 500 184 1 4 4 1 1 4 4 54 54 14 14 155 155 4 4 UNION UNIT C o m m u n i c a t i o n — Continued 57 9 0 5776 11 11 Total: 60 3 8 6095 6077 6055 6029 6050 6098 602 0 6074 6093 609 7 6002 6057 601 6 602 4 6086 6026 6080 606 5 6066 6023 602 5 6000 6082 604 5 6060 608 1 6067 604 8 6071 6073 6072 01 02 02 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 07 08 09 09 10 10 11 12 12 12 12 9,000 1,500 I— A L O C A L TV C O D E F A I R PRAC ♦ R E G I O N A L SCHDLE R C A G L O B A L C 0 M M U N I C A 7 I 0 N S INC C O M M TRADE D I V 10 a g r e e m e n t s ......................^. 35,850' l' Electric, gas, a n d sanitary services U T A H P O W E R ♦ L I G H T C O L U 57 H A W A I I A N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y INC LU 1260 SAN D I E G O GAS ♦ E L E C T R I C CO L U 465 C I N GAS ♦ ELEC C O - U N L I G H T - H E A T + P O W E R C O 1347 P U G E T S O U N D PO W E R + L I G H T CO B E L L E V U E L U 77 S O U T H E R N C A L I F GAS CO LUS 483 855 UGI C O R P H A R R I S B U R G - L A N C A S T E R - L E H I G H G E N L PU B L I C U T I L T I E S C O R P M E T R O E D I S O N C O 5 L P E O P L E S GAS L I G H T ♦ C O K E CO C H I C A G O L 1 8 0 0 7 T A M P A E L E C T R I C CO L U 108 T O L E D O E D I S O N C O T O L E D O L U 245 A R K A N S A S P O W E R * L I G H T C O 3 LUS CON N L I G H T + P O W E R CO 2 LUS H O U S T O N L I G H T I N G ♦ P O W E R CO L U 66 PA E L E C T R I C C O 5 D I V S 7 LU S P A N H A N D L E E A S T E R N P I P E LINE CO P O T O M A C E L E C T R I C P O W E R CO W A S H I N G T O N W I S C O N S I N P O W E R ♦ L I G H T C O L U 965 L O N G ISL A N D L I G H T I N G CO L U 10 4 9 L O N G I S L A N D L I G H T I N G CO L U 1381 O H I O E D I S O N CO L O C S 1 1 8 - 1 2 6 - 1 8 1 - 3 5 0 - 3 5 1 - 4 5 7 PA P O W E R ♦ L I G H T CO E A S T E R N PA A L A B A M A P O W E R CO A L A B A M A 9 LUS CHI ♦ S U B U R B A N R E F U S E D I S P O S A L ASS N L 731 C O N S O L GAS S U P P L Y C O R P C L A R K S B U R G LU 999 D A Y T O N P O W E R ♦ LI G H T CO L U 175 W I S C P U B L I C S E R V I C E C O R P L U 310 L O U I S V I L L E GAS ♦ E L E C T R I C C O L O U I S V I L L E M I C H I G A N C O N S O L I D A T E D G A S CO LU 80 P A C I F I C GAS ♦ ELEC C O O P E R M A I N T ♦ C O N S T R P A C I F I C GAS ♦ ELEC CO P A C I F I C GAS ♦ EL E C C O OF F ♦ C L E R I C A L LU 1245 1,700 1,100 2,300 1 , 650 1,350 5,300 1,100 1,950 1,900 1,1 0 0 1,100 2,200 2,750 3,000 1,900 1,150 3,100 1,450 2 , 800 1,400 1,9 0 0 5,0 0 0 3,600 1,250 1,550 2,300 1,100 2,350 1,700 14,950 2,000 3,8 0 0 Total: 32 a g r e e m e n t s ..................• ...... ^. 8 1 , 8 0 0 W h o l e s a l e trade 6303 6331 6310 6306 6302 6333 6300 6318 6311 05 05 05 05 09 09 09 09 10 L _ ____________ I— A W H O L E S A L E G R O C E R S C H A I N S T ORE ♦ 1 OTH INDUS E M P L R S + D I S T R I B U T O R S A S S N C A LIF INDUS E M PLRS A N D D I S T R I B U T O R S ASS N C A L I F SA N F R A N C I S C O E M P L O Y E R S C O U N C I L 5 L U S F O O D E M P L O Y E R S C O U N C I L INC FOOD IND W A R E H O U S E F O O D EMP L R S C N C L INC F O O D INDUS O F F I C E 5 LUS F O O D EMPLRS C N C L INC D E L I V E R Y D R V R S A G M T 9 LS INTL H A R V E S T E R C O D E P O T ♦ T R A N S F E R C O N T R A C T I— A OIL PET R O C H E M + L I Q U I D P R O D D R V R S A G M T 1,000 1,500 4,000 2,000 3,250 1,300 1,050 1, 3 5 0 2,000 Total: 9 a g r e e m e n t s ........................... . 1 7 , 450 i__ :____________ a n d f a r m e q u i p m e n t dealers Retail t r a d e — building materials, h a r d w a r e , 6402 6404 03 07 L U M B E R ♦ MIL L E M P L O Y E R S 8 C N T Y S 5 LUS D E T R O I T L U M B E R M E N S ASS N LU 458 Total: 2 a g r e e m e n t s ......................... _____________________ ■ 1, 0 0 0 1 , 600 . 2,600 8__________________________________ ii _ : __________ Retail t r a d e — g e n e r a l m e r c h a n d i s e 65 0 2 6508 6500 6506 6529 651 7 652 8 01 01 02 02 06 06 07 F E O E R A L S INC D E T R O I T L U 362 MAC Y R H + CO INC M A C Y * S NEW Y O R K L U 1-S B L O O M I N G D A L E BROS N Y C L U 3 GIMBEL BROTHERS PITTSBURGH LU 1407 J O R D A N M A R S H CO L U 1291 WOODWARD ♦ LOTHROP A R L E N R E A L T Y ♦ D E V E L O P M E N T C O R P K O R V E T T E S DI V 3,000 7,500 3,6 0 0 1,300 1,500 5,000 4,500 Total: 7 a g r e e m e n t s ......................... .. 26, 400 i-------------- Retail tr a d e — food stores 6816 6802 01 01 F I R S T NATL S T O R E S INC L U 2 F I R S T NATL S T O R E S INC B O S T O N L U 592 1,700 1,800 AGREE MENT NC* EXP. 0ATE COMPANY AND L OCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 UNION UNIT SIC STATE 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 00 33 10 16 84 40 54 43 00 43 40 32 00 10 00 10 46 00 00 14 00 33 20 56 56 93 85 21 93 35 93 93 31 93 93 93 155 542 155 155 184 155 184 184 184 184 184 184 184 15 5 531 155 184 18 4 531 155 184 539 155 184 155 155 184 184 155 184 155 155 184 184 184 184 3 1 4 4 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 1 3 4 1 4 4 4 4 1 3 3 4 2 3 3 3 4 3 3 2 55 55 43 33 218 531 2 3 56 56 56 56 21 21 21 21 305 332 332 305 2 2 3 2 58 58 58 58 58 58 58 50 31 92 21 93 43 43 145 145 145 145 145 145 14 5 1 2 2 2 3 3 2 2,300 1,000 3 300 59 59 91 21 184 1 26 2 2 1,600 1 ,600 63 35 163 1 Retail t r a d e - f o o d stores— C o n t i n u e d 6732 6853 6761 6706 6779 6737 6847 6733 6781 6796 6850 6801 6804 6825 6320 6834 6835 6845 6792 6851 6762 6842 6799 6846 6823 6743 6817 6844 6765 6742 6778 6772 6748 6729 6756 6755 01 03 03 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 09 09 10 10 10 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 12 12 12 I — A I N D E P M E A T M A R K E T S ST L O U I S L U 88 2,400 J E W E L COS INC J E W E L F O O D S T O R E S M E L R O S E P A R K 1,000 S T O P + S H O P C O S I NC 5 L U S 1,600 F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC L U 3 7 1 2,900 I-A D E N V E R R E T A I L G R O C E R S L U 7 8,000 I— A M E A T D E P T E M P L O Y E E S G R E A T E R K A N S A S C I T Y 1,300 I-A FO O D S T O R E S G I A N T A+P S A F E W A Y 1 5 7 - 2 3 3 - 2 7 8 2,000 I -A I N D S U P E R M A R K E T S G R O C E R Y D I V L U 6 5 5 7,000 K R O G E R C O GA A L A ♦ T E N N L U S 1 0 6 3 ♦ 1 6 5 7 1,700 1,250 K R O G E R CO LU 655 M I L G R A M F O O D S T O R E S M I S S O U R I K A N S A S L U 782 1,000 NATL TEA CO STANDARD G R O CERY D I V I S I O N 1,500 3,500 V O R N A D O C O R P 5 C O S 13 L U S N O N - F O O D S T O R E S A L M A C S INC L U 328 2,000 FELR MASTER FOOD AGMT 1,500 G R E A T A + P T E A C O INC L U 10 2,300 H I N K Y - D I N K Y S U P E R M A R K E T S INC O M A H A L U 1 0 1 5 1,300 I-A G R O C E R Y A G M T Q U A D - C I T I E S L U 1470 1,500 NATL TEA CO NATL WAREHOUSE DIV 1,250 F E R N A N D E S S U P E R M A R K E T S INC L U 4 2 ,500 K R O G E R CO LU 1099 2,200 1,200 J E W E L C O S INC E I S N E R F O O D S T O R E S D I V C H I 5 9 5 L O B L A W INC NY ♦ P E N N 1,800 C O L O N I A L S T O R E S INC R A L E I G H D I V L U 2 0 4 1,350 1 ,000 G R E A T A + P T E A C O I NC L U 5 2 5 I - A B U T C H E R S ♦ R E T F I S H + P O U L T R Y A G M T L U 11 5 1,700 I-A C H A I N + I N D E P E N D E N T F O O D S T O R E S L U 1 5 6 4 1,500 1,600 S T A R S U P E R M A R K E T S I NC L U 3 4 5 2,150 F O O D E M P L O Y E R S C O U N C I L INC I-A C H A I N ♦ IND F O O D S T O R E S L U 444 4,650 I-A R E T A I L D I S T R I B U T I O N A G R E E M E N T L U 2 2 9 1,200 1,800 I-A R E TAIL MEAT M A R K E T S F R O Z E N FOOD L O C K E R 2,500 K R O G E R C O L O C A L S 1 0 5 9 31 ♦ 1 5 5 2 4,000 I-A FOOD S T ORE C O N T R A C T ALAMEDA C O U N T Y 870 3,100 I-A G R O C E R Y ♦ D E L I C A T E S S E N L U 648 5,750 RET A I L GROCERS ASSN SAN JOSE AREA 428 Total: 38 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . . 88, 500 1 ________ Retail t r a d e — aut o m o t i v e dealers a n d gasoline service stations 6902 6921 07 07 GRE A T E R ST L O U I S A U T O M O T I V E ASSN ♦ 1 OTHER I -A G A R A G E A T T E N D A N T S A G M T L U 7 3 1 Total: 2 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . 6907 6906 6912 6909 02 03 07 09 R E T A I L APPAREL M E R C H A N T S ASSN L 340 A S S O C M E N ' S W E A R R E T A I L E R S OF N Y LU 721 I-A M A J O R S H O E C H A I N S T O R E S L U S 1 2 6 8 ♦ 2 8 7 RETAIL APPAREL MERCHANTS ASSN LU 340 Total: 4 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... , 7108 7136 7102 7121 7118 7141 7127 01 06 07 08 09 11 11 G O V E R N M E N T S E R V I C E S INC W A S H L U 4 7 3 C I N N C U L I N A R Y C O U N C I L INC L U 12 PR E S I D E N T S CNCL OF FOOD BEV + LODGING 4 LUS U N I T E D R E S T L I Q U O R D E A L E R S OF M A N H A T T A N INC I-A H O T E L S R E S T A U R A N T ♦ T A V E R N S F R E S N O I - A IND S T A N D A R D R E S T A U R A N T C O N T R A C T 5 L U S ST L O U I S R E S T O W N E R S A S S N 5 L US Total: 7 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... 7302 7304 09 12 G R E A T E R S E A T T L E R E T A I L D R U G A S S N INC L U 3 3 0 M E T R O P A C K A G E S T O R E A S S N INC 1 2 2 Total* 2 a g r e e m e n t s r-...................... 2,200 1,300 3,500 Retail t r a d e — ap p a r e l a n d a c c e s s o r y stores 2,000 1,000 1,200 3,000 7, 200 Retail t r a d e — eating a n d drinking places 1,200 1,000 6,000 1,000 2,200 2,400 1,400 . 15,200 1_______________ Retail tr a d e — M i s c e l l a n e o u s retail stores i In s u r a n c e carriers 7403 04 N O R T H W E S T E R N MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO LU 500 1 Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t ....................... • AGREE MENT NO* COMPANY EXP* DATE AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 UNION UNIT SIC STATE 65 65 65 65 21 33 93 21 118 129 118 1 18 2 2 2 2 R e a l estate 7409 7420 7407 7411 04 05 05 09 10,000 1,000 2,050 4,000 . 17,050 R E A L T Y A D V I S O R Y 80 ON L A B O R R E L S BLDG M A N A G E R S ASSN OF C H I C A G O L U 399 B L D G O W N E R S + M G R S A S S N O F SF L U S 8 7 ♦ 14 B R ONX R E A L T Y A D V I S O R Y B O A R D LU 32-E Total: 4 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... Hotels, r o o m i n g houses, camps, i a n d other lodging places 7515 7525 7500 7501 7518 7504 7508 7524 03 04 05 05 09 11 11 12 N E V A D A RESORT ASSN RES O R T HOT E L S 14,100 N E VADA RESORT ASSN DOWNT O W N HOTELS ♦ C A S I N O S 3,600 A S S O C H O T E L S ♦ M O T E L S INC M S T R H O T E L A G M T 2,000 A S S O C H O T E L S + M O T E L S INC M S T R R E S I D E N T A G M T 2,000 SO F L O R I D A HO T E L ♦ MOTEL ASSN DADE C O U N T Y 8,000 1,900 G R E A T E R B O S T O N H O T E L A N D M O T O R INN A S S N 2,000 H O T E L + MOTEL ASSN OF G R E A T E R ST LO U I S SAN MATEO COUNTY RESTAURANT HOTEL OWNERS 6,000 Total: 8 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . . 3 9 , 6 0 0 ____________________________________________________________________ 1_______________ P e r s o n a l services 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 88 88 21 21 59 14 43 93 145 145 118 118 14 5 145 145 14 5 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 7714 7720 07 09 2,000 NJ L A U N D R Y ♦ C L E A N I N G I N S T I T U T E L U 284 1,500 I-A L I N E N S U P P L I E R S L U 284 Total: 2 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... . . 3 ,500 1_______________ M i s c e l l a n e o u s business services 72 72 22 22 236 236 2 3 7945 7988 7968 7942 7903 7977 7976 02 04 04 09 10 11 11 7,800 I-A M A I N T E N A N C E C O N T R L U 399 349 278 1,700 A S S N O F T E L E P H O N E A N S W E R I N G S E R V I C E S INC L 7 8 0 1,500 I-A M A I N T E N A N C E C O N T R S K I N G C O U N T Y 4 ,500 I-A S E C U R I T Y A G E N C I E S U P T O W N A G M T B A Y A R E A 1,750 P I T T S B U R G H B U I L D I N G S A S S N L U 29 2,700 APT BL D G O W N E R S ♦ M G R S A S S N OF C H I C A G O LU 1 4,300 C H I C A G O REAL E STATE O W N E R S C O U N C I L LU 1 Total: 7 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... ^. . 24, 250 1 M i s c e l l a n e o u s repair services 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 93 21 91 93 23 33 33 118 332 118 500 11 8 11 8 118 3 2 3 3 2 2 2 7990 06 NECA 1,000 1, 000 76 21 127 2 1,300 1,500 1,000 6,000 9,800 78 78 „ 78 78 93 93 93 00 192 163 531 162 2 2 2 3 1,200 1, 2 0 0 79 21 19 2 2 2,600 3.000 35,000 2,200 4.000 5,350 80 80 80 80 80 80 93 41 21 91 21 93 118 903 332 903 118 118 2 3 2 2 2 4 86 93 145 2 B U F F A L O W E S T E R N N Y S T A T E C H P T LU 41 ....................... Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t 1I M o t i o n pictures 7983 7911 7916 7969 01 01 01 04 A N I M A T E D FILM P R O D U C E R S AS S N L U 839 A S S N O F M O T I O N P I C T U R E ♦ TV P R O D U C E R S O F F I C E A S S N O F M O T I O N P I C T U R E + TV P R O D U C E R S INC I-A T E L E V I S I O N V I D E O T A P E A G M T ( S Y N D I C A T I O N ) Total: 4 a g r e e m e n t s ......................... 7960 07 LEAGUE 7931 7928 7930 7949 7948 7929 04 05 06 06 07 10 A F F I L I A T E D H O S P I T A L S OF SAN FRAN LU 250 I-A T W I N CITY H O S P I T A L S M I N N E A P O L I S - S T PAUL L E A G U E OF V O L U N T A R Y H O S P I T A L S + H O M E S OF NY SEATTLE AREA HOSPITAL COUNCIL A S S N OF P R I V A T E H O S P I T A L S INC L U 14 4 K A I S E R F O U N D A T I O N H O S P I T A L S LU 250 A m u s e m e n t a n d recreation services, OF except m o t i o n pictures N Y T H E A T R E S ♦ P R O D U C E R S INC L U 1 Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t ......................... M e d i c a l a nd other health services Total: 6 a g r e e m e n t s ........................ • coL O cnU ,i 1D Nonprofit m e m b e r s h i p organizations 7970 07 SAN FRANCISCO CLUB INSTITUTE Total: 1 a g r e e m e n t Total: 1,050 1.050 A g r e e m e n t s ........... 681; W o r k e r s ............... 3, 3 5 8 , 0 9 5 1 See a p p e n d i x A for abbreviations. 2 See a p p e n d i x B for definitions of c o d e s 6 LUS ........................ NOTE: D a t a b a s e d o n a g r e e m e n t s o n file with the B u r e a u of L a b o r Statistics, excluding railroads, airlines an d g o v e r n m e n t a g r e e m e n t s . C o m p an y and location Num ber of I w orkers Codes S IC State U nio n U nit January A ir West Clerical .......................................................................... Federal Dept. Stores Inc ............................................................... Five Apparel T ru ckin g Em plrs A gm t N Y C ...................................... Northwest Tow boat A ssn .............................................................. Owens Illinois, Inc L ily T u lip C up ................................................. Weyerhaeuser Co D ierks D iv ........................................................ Total: 6 situations 1,500 1,000 1,500 2,000 1,400 3,000 45 53 42 44 26 24 00 30 21 91 22 70 104 343 4 4 3 2 4 4 129 184 500 553 155 129 218 500 337 100 2 3 4 1 3 2 4 1 1 1 143 116 143 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 5 4 2 5 2 2 2 3 305 134 154 244 .............................................................. . 10,400 February B T E A Massachusetts Chapter .............. Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores Eugene E I D u Pont De N em ours & C o Iowa . . . Engelhard Minerals & Chem icals New ark Fo o d Mart/W aldbaum s Mass & C o n n . . . ......... N ew England R o a d Bldrs Maine Ozark Airlines Office-Clerical .............. Rem ington A rm s Co. Inc Bridgeport . . . Stearns & Foster Lo cklan d .................. Walt Disney Productions Anaheim ....... Total: 10 situations 4,500 1,000 1,100 1,500 1,000 2,500 1,300 1,000 1,100 3,500 16 54 28 33 54 16 45 19 22 79 14 92 42 22 10 11 00 16 31 93 ............................................................... 18,500 M arch A G C Little R o c k Chapter ........................ A G C N e w M exico Bldg. Branch Albuquerque A G C San A n to n io Chapter ....................... A G C Southern Florida Chapter ................ A G C Springfield ...................................... E I D u Pont De N em ours & Co. K en tu cky . . E I D u Pont De Nem ours & Co. Virginia . . . Manhattan & B ro n x Surface Transp N Y C .. . M isty H arbor S h op s Baltimore .................. N E C A Baltim ore Chapter ......................... N ew Y o rk Transit A u th o rity N Y C ............. Northw est Line Constructors Pacific Coast . Queens Lines Inc N Y C ............................. S M C A Portland Chapter ........................ Utility and Sewer Contrs Terre Haute ....... Total: 1 5 situations AGC AGC AGC AGC AGC AGC AGC ............................................. ............... 60,5 5 0 Central III. Bldrs. Div. Springfield ......... Central III. Chapter & 1 other .............. K noxville Chapter ............................... Kn o xville Chapter ............................... M em ph is C h a p t e r ................................ M em ph is Chapter West Tenn. Barg. G roup M ichigan C h a p t e r ................................ 2,800 1,000 1,000 1,500 1,200 2,250 2,250 5,350 1,200 1,200 31,700 1,800 1,150 1,150 5,000 15 17 15 15 16 28 28 41 23 17 41 17 41 17 15 71 85 74 59 33 61 54 21 52 52 21 90 21 92 32 129 143 500 500 341 134 127 341 127 341 187 143 Company and location Number of workers Codes1 S IC State Union Unit April— Continued A G C Michigan Chapter Labor Relations . . ........... A G C Michigan Chapter Saginaw Assn, of U ptow n Converters N Y C ......... Assoc. Contrs. of O h io & A G C ............. Bates Mfg. Co. Inc A u g u s t a .................... B T E A Cleveland Chapter ...................... B T E A Cleveland Chapter ...................... B T E A Rochester C h a p t e r ...................... Calif. Conf. o f M ason Contrs. L o s Angeles Central Fla. Contrs. A ssn. Orlando ......... Chicago Area Foundries ...................... Construction Contrs. Council Wash., D.C. . Construction Contrs. Council Wash., D .C . Contrs. Assn, of Eastern Pa., Phila ......... Direct Mailmaster Contract N ew Y o rk E I D u Pont De N em ours & Co. N ew Jersey E m p lo yin g Bricklayers Assn. Phila ......... F & M Shaefer Brew ing Co. N ew Y o rk City F o o d Superm arkets N ew Y o rk City (4) . . H ighw ay Constructors Inc .................... H ighw ay C onstructors Inc. Louisville . . . . H ighw ay C onstructors Inc. Louisville . . . . Highw ay C onstructors Inc. Louisville . . . . Independent Contrs. M a i n e .................... J Weingarten, G rocery S u p p ly Houston Lehigh Valley Contrs A ssn .................... Lum ber & M ill Em ployers A ssn ............. Mason Contrs Assn. Wash., D .C ............. Milwaukee Lithographers A ssn ............... M odulus C o rp .................................... Montana Contrs Assn ........................... New England R o a d Bldrs. Assn. Mass . . . . Owens C orn in g Fiberglass Co. A nderson . Plum bing, Heating, & Piping San Jose . . . Plum bing Ind ustry Contrs. Dade C o u n ty . Q uad C ity Bldrs. Assn. R o c k Island ....... Quaker C ity Lum ber Products A ssn ....... Realty A d viso ry Bd. Lab Reis N Y C ....... San Diego Plastering & Lathing ............. Seattle Warehouse Distributors ............. S M C A C olum bus Chapter .................... U nion Carbide Corp. Nuclear D i v ........... W ashington M etrop Area Transit ........... Total: 50 situations .................... 1,100 2,000 1,000 2,000 1,750 3,600 3,600 1,000 2,000 2,200 3,300 5,300 1,800 3,000 1,500 4,700 2,000 1,650 9,650 5,200 6,000 5,000 6,000 1,000 3,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,300 1,000 2,100 3,000 1,150 1,400 1,000 1,200 1 ,5 0 0 2,500 1,800 2,500 1,400 1,200 3,000 15 15 50 15 22 15 15 15 17 15 33 15 15 16 73 28 17 20 54 16 16 16 16 15 54 15 24 17 27 34 16 16 32 17 17 15 24 65 17 50 17 28 41 34 34 21 31 11 31 31 21 93 59 33 53 53 23 21 22 23 21 21 61 61 61 61 11 74 23 93 53 35 00 81 14 57 93 59 33 23 21 93 91 31 61 50 119 119 332 129 337 164 170 115 115 143 161 119 129 143 332 500 115 531 184 119 143 119 143 119 531 119 119 115 243 335 129 531 135 170 170 143 119 118 143 531 187 357 197 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 4 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 3 1 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 1 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 7 143 129 129 168 115 129 170 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 .119,050 May A G C Alabama Chapter ............................ A G C Arizona Chapter ............................ A G C Cincinnati C h ap te r........................... A G C Detroit Chapter .............................. A G C Mich. Chapter Bldrs. Assn. & 1 other . . . A G C So. Fla. Chap, and 1 other Ft. Lauderdale Air Cond. & Refrig. Contrs. Assn. Milwaukee . 1,050 3,500 1,600 2,000 5,000 2,000 1,000 16 16 15 17 17 15 17 63 86 31 34 34 59 35 Num ber of w orkers C o m p an y and location C o de s1 S IC State U nio n U nit M a y — C ontinued Allied Constr. Em plrs. Assn. Milwaukee ........................................ Allied Constr. Em plrs. Assn. Inc. Milw aukee .................................. Allied Constr. Industries Assn. C in c in n a t i........................................ A rizona Genl. Contrs ................................................................... Assoc. Brick Masons, M ason Contrs. N Y C ...................................... Associated Bldg. Contrs. of Bingham ton ........................................ B T E A Rochester Chapter .............................................................. Builders Assn, of Chicago .............................................................. Builders Assn, of Chicago & 1 other ............................................... Chicago R o o fin g Contrs. A ssn ...................................................... Constr. Emplrs. Lab Reis N ew Y o rk Chapter .................................. Constr. Em plrs. Labor Reis Rochester ........................................... Constr. Em plrs. of N orth Central West Va ...................................... Detroit Mason Contrs. A ssn .......................................................... ........................................ E I Du Pont De Nem ours & Co. Virginia Eastern N Y Constr. Emplrs. A lb a n y ............................................... Electrical Contrs. of Santa Clara ................................................... Foundation & Marine Contrs. Assn. N e w t o n .................................... Genl. Contrs. of West Virginia ...................................................... Hoerner W aldorf C orp ................................................................. III. R oa d Bldrs. Assn. Concrete Contrs. Chicago ............................... Major Superm arkets (3) in Indiana ................................................. Major Superm arkets (5) in Kansas City .......................................... M ason Contrs. Assn, of Allegheny C o u n ty ...................................... M ason Contrs. of Detroit .............................................................. Master Bldrs. Assn, of Western P a ................................................... Master Plasterers Assn. Boston ...................................................... Mech. Contrs. Assn, of Chicago ..................................................... Mich. Conveyor Mfrs. Assn. Detroit ............................................... M id A m Regional Barg. Assn. Gary ............................................... M id A m Regional Barg. Assn, of Chicago ........................................ M id A m Regional Barg. Assn, of Chicago ........................................ M id A m Regional Barg. Assn, of Chicago ........................................ M id -O h io Valley Industry Contrs. & A G C ........................................ N E C A Cincinnati Chapter ............................................................ M P P A | ns Anoplps ...................... . . N E C A M inneapolis Chapter .......................................................... N E C A N orth Central Chapter In d ia n a p o lis ...................................... N E C A O akland Chapter ............................................................... N E C A Sacram ento Chapter .......................................................... N E C A San Diego C h a p t e r .............................................................. N E C A San Francisco ................................................ N E C A Southern Nevada Chapter ................................................... Niagara M o h aw k Power C o rp ........................................................ N orth Central Constr. Emplrs. Council ........................................... O hio Valley Bldrs. Exchange ........................................ Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co ....................................... P D C A Milwaukee Chapter ............................................................ Quad C ity Builders Assn. R o c k Island ........................................... R & M Kaufm ann Co ................................................ Reinforced Steel Contrs. Assn. D e t r o i t ........................................... R o o fin g & Sheet Metal Contrs. of B o s t o n ........................................ Scott Paper West Coast Div. W ashington ........................................ Seattle Area Bakeries ................................................................... Seattle Plum bing & Pipe Em plrs ..................................................... 3,150 1,200 1,500 7,000 6,500 1,200 1,500 5,000 20,000 1,200 1,900 2,000 1,000 1,500 1,700 1,000 1,550 2,000 3,000 1,100 1,900 4,000 4 ,400 1,050 2,300 1,000 1,000 4,500 1,100 2,400 4,000 2,000 6,000 1,500 1,100 6,000 1,600 1,100 1,350 1,100 1,500 1,400 1,100 7,200 2,000 2,000 15 15 15 15 17 15 15 15 15 17 15 16 15 15 28 17 17 17 15 26 17 54 54 17 17 16 17 17 15 15 15 15 16 17 17 17 17 17 17 15 17 17 17 35 35 31 86 21 21 21 33 33 33 21 21 55 34 54 49 15 21 21 16 55 1,150 1,400 1,400 1,500 5,000 1,700 1,350 1,000 1,500 49 17 15 23 17 17 70 35 33 40 34 14 26 20 17 91 91 91 21 93 14 55 41 33 32 43 23 34 23 14 33 34 32 33 33 33 31 31 93 41 32 93 93 93 93 88 143 115 143 119 115 143 119 115 143 185 129 143 119 143 500 116 127 143 143 231 168 184 184 115 115 119 143 170 119 119 129 143 129 119 127 127 127 127 127 127 127 127 127 127 119 129 357 164 119 134 116 187 527 531 170 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 3 2 2 4 2 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 4 2 2 4 2 2 4 3 3 C o m p an y and location Num ber of w orkers C o d e s1 S IC State U nio n U nit M a y — Continued Southern Calif. R apid Transit Los Angeles ...................................... Tw o G uys NJ Md. and Pa .............................................................. W ashington Restaurants & Bars W hatcom ...................................... Wholesale Beer Distributors A ssn ................................................... Will C o u n ty Contrs. & 1 other Joliet ............................................. W isconsin R oa d Bldrs. Assn. Milw aukee .......................................... Total: 6 8 situations 3,200 8,500 1,000 2,500 1,600 2,000 41 53 58 50 15 16 93 00 91 93 33 35 358 184 5 4 145 531 143 143 3 2 2 2 170 119 119 143 119 187 115 170 531 218 119 184 184 184 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 3 3 3 4 .............................................................. 180,550 June A G C of So. Calif. San Diego & Lo s Angeles .................................... A G C Providence Chapter .............................................................. A G C Shreveport Chapter .............................................................. A G C Utah Chapter Statewide ...................................................... A G C Utah Chapter Salt Lake C ity ................................................. A ir C o nditioning Contrs. Phoenix ................................................. A rizona M asonry Contrs. Assn. Phoenix ........................................ Assn, of Plum bing Mech. Contrs. Sacram ento ................................. Associated Brewers, Inc. B a lt im o r e ................................................. Brunsw ick C o rp M ercury Div. F o n d D u L a c .................................... B T E A of Western Mass Springfield ................................................. Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores .......................................................... Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores Iow a & III .......................................... Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores In d & III ............................................. Container Corp. of Am erica .......................................................... Dayton-W alther Corp. D ayton ...................................................... Em pire State Cloth Hat & Cap M illinery ........................................ Fo o d Em plrs. Labor Relations ...................................................... General Electric C o ....................................................................... General Electric Co. D rafting Dept ................................................. General Electric Co. Service Shop s ................................................. Genl. Contrs. Bldg. & M ason Contrs. N Y C ...................................... Glass Managem ent Assn. San Francisco .......................................... Grand U nion Co ......................................................................... Greater Mil. Hotel-Motel A ssn ...................................................... Highw ay Contrs. Inc ..................................................................... Hudson Valley Constr. Em plrs. New burgh ...................................... Kansas C ity Garm ent M frs ............................................................ Kansas C ity Power and Light Co ................................................... Lo ng Island Railroad ................................................................... Master Stair Builders A s s n .............................................................. Mech Contrs. of Westchester Y o n k e r s ............................................. Municipal Hospitals A ide s N Y C ..................................................... Municipal R ailw ay Co. San F r a n c i s c o ............................................. N E C A G rand Rapids ................................................................... N E C A Phoenix ............................................................................ N E C A W ashington, D .C ............................................................... New Y o rk City Transit A u th o rity ................................................. Packaging Corp. of Am erica .......................................................... P D C A Oregon and Southw est W ashington ...................................... Plastics Products Mfrs. Assn. N ew Y o rk City .................................. Realty A d v iso ry Bd. Lab Reis N Y C ............................................... Scott Paper Co. Northeast D iv ...................................................... 2,500 1,300 1,300 3,000 2,100 1,400 1,150 1,100 1,500 3,200 1,400 3,000 3,000 27,000 2,500 1,000 1,000 3,000 15,500 3,000 4,000 3,000 1,100 1,000 3,000 6,000 2,150 1,300 2,150 1,200 1,000 1,050 16,000 1,800 1,200 1,600 2,300 1,500 1,000 3,500 1,000 1,500 1,000 17 17 15 16 16 17 17 17 20 35 15 54 54 54 26 37 23 54 36 36 36 17 17 54 70 16 17 23 49 40 24 17 80 41 17 17 17 41 26 17 30 65 26 93 15 72 87 87 86 86 93 52 35 14 33 00 30 00 31 00 00 00 00 00 21 93 16 35 61 21 43 47 21 21 21 21 93 34 86 53 21 31 90 21 21 11 231 335 30 5 531 218 105 100 143 164 155 145 129 116 134 127 181 119 170 193 341 127 127 127 193 231 164 134 118 231 1 2 2 4 4 4 2 2 4 2 2 2 2 4 4 2 2 4 0 2 2 2 5 4 2 2 2 4 C om p any and location N um ber of w orkers C o de s1 S IC State Union U nit Ju ne— Continued ...................... 1,400 27 Sunshine Biscuit Co. Sayreville U nion Painting Contrs. Assn. Denver Utah Plum bing Contrs. Salt Lake City W om en's Apparel Chains Assn. N Y C 1,000 1,400 1,000 4,500 20 17 17 Spartan Printing Co Total: 4 8 situations ............. 56 33 21 84 87 21 100 108 164 170 134 1 1 2 2 2 218 170 112 100 231 231 197 104 337 187 134 127 1 2 4 5 1 4 5 4 2 3 2 3 4 1 147,600 July Am ana Refrigeration Inc. A m ana ........... Assn, of Mechanical Contrs. A t l a n t a ....... Babcock & W ilcox Co ......................... Bay Area R apid Transit San Francisco .. . Brow n Co. Kalam azoo ......................... Brow n Co. Parchment K V P Div. Michigan Cleveland Transit System ...................... Delta Airlines Pilots ............................. G uild Yarn Labor Conference N Y C ....... Houston Sheet Metal Contrs ................ K nit M f rs. of N ew Jersey ...................... Lighting Fixture Mfrs. L o s Angeles ....... Lon g Island Railroad ........................... M irro A lu m in u m Co. Manitow ac ........... N E C A Atlanta .................................... N ew England C lothing & Rainw ear Boston Northwest A irlines Clerical-Office ......... S Klein Dept. Stores Inc. N Y C ............. Standard Brands Inc. Clinton ................ W entworth Mfg. Co. F lo r e n c e ................ W estinghouse Electric Corp. Bloom ington Westinghouse Electric Corp. Y o u n g w o o d . Total: 22 situations .................... 1,600 1,400 1,100 1,100 1,200 1,050 1,700 3,050 1,000 1,200 3,000 1,000 1,350 1,800 1,700 1,000 3,000 3,000 1,000 1,500 1,100 1,000 36 17 34 41 26 26 41 45 22 17 23 36 40 34 17 23 45 53 20 23 35 36 42 58 00 93 34 34 31 00 21 74 22 93 21 35 58 14 00 21 42 57 41 23 358 3 35 127 134 183 332 208 134 335 127 2 2 4 4 1 1 1 1 34,850 A ugust A G C Birm ingham Chapter ...................... A ir Freight Co. & 2 others N Y C .............. Braniff A irw ays Pilots ........................... Burns Intern Security Service N Y C ......... Chicago Lighting Equipm ent M frs ........... Dresser Industries Harbison-Walker Refrac . Electric Hose & Rubber Co. W ilm ington . . . Electrical Machine Mfg. M in n e a p o lis ......... Electro Motive Corp. Florence ................ Fischer Packing Co. & Klarer Louisville . . . . F o o d Em plrs. Council Inc ...................... Golden Gate Restaurant Assn. San Francisco Indep. Contractors Ft. Lauderdale ........... Lon don tow n Mfg. Co ............................. Machine S h o p Bakeries Dallas ................ N E C A Jersey City ................................. 1,650 2,600 1,300 1,200 1,000 2,500 1,200 1,000 1,400 1,350 2,000 4,000 1,200 1,750 1,300 1,100 15 42 45 73 36 32 30 36 36 20 54 58 15 23 20 17 63 21 00 21 33 00 51 41 57 61 93 93 59 50 74 22 143 531 104 494 127 114 333 347 346 155 218 145 115 305 108 127 2 3 4 1 3 4 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 4 3 2 C o m p an y and location N um ber of w orkers C o d e s1 S IC State U n io n U nit A u g u st— Continued N E C A Orange C o u n ty ................................................................. Plum bing & Mechanical Contrs. Hawaii .......................................... Sperry R an d Corp. Sperry G y r o s c o p e ............................................. United Illum inating Co. Connecticut ............................................. Westinghouse Electric Corp. H am pton ............................................ Total: 21 situations 1,800 1,250 1.000 1.000 1.000 17 17 38 49 30 93 95 21 16 57 127 170 347 342 119 2 2 1 4 1 184 553 531 461 170 531 134 335 341 531 553 347 347 480 347 4 1 2 4 1 1 2 4 170 143 50 0 112 305 155 164 333 305 116 184 2 2 0 2 3 2 2 1 3 2 3 50 21 93 31 00 21 43 31 31 21 184 332 155 33 3 341 4 1 3 1 4 1 1 16 32 93 553 107 .............................................................. 32,600 September A & P Tea Co. Mass, and Maine ..................................................... Bendix Corp. Fostoria ................................................................. B o x Assn, of Am erica ................................................................. Chrysler Corp. Plant Guards .......................................................... Constr. Em plrs. Assn. & Mech. Contrs. H o u s t o n ............................... Cosm opolitan Tw ine & Paper A ssn ................................................. Cotton C ity Wash Frocks Inc ........................................................ Crane Co. Chicago ...................................................................... Dade C o u n ty Transit Miam i .......................................................... Fo o d Em plrs. Council Inc. Los Angeles .......................................... Ford M o tor Corp. Plant Guards ..................................................... General M o tors Corp. Delco Products D ayton ................................. General M o tors Corp. Fridgidaire D ayton ...................................... Hotel Em plrs. Assn, of Hawaii ...................................................... IT T A vionics & Defense C om m unications ...................................... Mechanical Contrs. of H ouston & 1 other ...................................... Michigan R oa d Bldrs. Assn. Lansing ............................................... New Y o rk Transit A u th o rity Su bw ay N Y C .................................... O hio Valley Area Agm t. O hio K y. & W. V a .................................... Outerwear Manufacturers Nationwide ............................................ Pacific Coast Meat Jobbers Assn. San Francisco ............................... P D C A Miam i .............................................................................. Seiberling R ubber Co. Barberton ................................................. . Shirt Pajamas Pants & Oth C otton M frs .......................................... Structural Steel & Ornamental Iron Em plrs .................................... Th rifty D rug & Others ................................................................. Total: 26 situations 54 1,500 1,150 1,200 1,100 5,200 1,350 2,000 1,200 1,100 7,000 1,800 1,600 7,000 3,800 1,000 1,000 26 23 34 41 54 37 36 36 70 36 17 5,000 4,2 0 0 1,500 16,000 2,000 2,000 1,000 80,000 1,000 1,100 16 41 16 23 20 17 30 23 34 59 36 26 37 17 10 31 21 00 74 21 50 33 59 93 00 31 31 95 20 74 34 21 00 00 93 59 31 00 22 93 2 4 2 2 1 1 6 ............................................................. .152,800 October A & P Tea Co. and 1 other ............................................................ Albert Einstein College of Medicine N Y C ...................................... Chain & Indep. G rocery Stores Santa Clara .................................... Cooper Tire & R ubber Co. Findlay ............................................... Eastern Airlines Flight Attendants ................................................. G T E Sylvania Inc. Seneca F a l l s ...................................................... Krey Packing Co. St. Louis .......................................................... M idland-Ross Corp. Cleveland ...................................................... M idland-Ross Corp. Painesville ...................................................... Quality Shoe M frs ....................................................................... Scovill Mfrs. Co. W aterbury .......................................................... .................................... 3,000 1,000 ................................................................... 3,200 Sheller-Glove Corp. Hardy Div. U nion City United Parcel Service 1,400 1,600 1,800 1,000 4,000 1,300 1,200 1,300 1,250 3,000 Total: 13 situations .............................................................. 25,050 t________ 54 80 54 30 45 36 20 34 22 31 34 33 42 335 155 553 337 334 531 1 1 4 1 1 4 Number of workers Company and location Codes1 SIC State Union Unit November 1,100 1,150 1,000 2,000 2,500 1,100 1,000 1,700 2,000 3,800 12,000 2,600 1,900 Allegheny Airlines P i l o t s ............................................................... Allis-Chalm ers Corp. Pa. & A la ...................................................... Cl B A Geigy Corp. M cIn to sh .......................................................... Distribution & Film Service Cos. N Y C ............................................ Eastern Labor A d viso ry A ssn ........................................................ Florsheim Co. Chicago ................................................................. Garage & Parking Lot Agm t. San Francisco .................................... G T E Sylvania Inc. Mass. & N ew Y o rk ........................................... G T E Sylvania Inc. Pennsylvania ..................................................... Johns H o pkin s Univ. Hosp. & Others Baltim ore ............................... M etrop N ew Y o rk N ursing Hom es N Y C .......................................... Port A u th o rity of Allegheny C o u n ty Pitts ...................................... Western Airlines G ro u n d Service ................................................... Total: 13 situations 45 36 28 78 42 31 75 36 36 80 80 41 45 00 00 63 21 00 33 93 00 23 52 21 23 00 104 553 357 192 531 334 531 347 218 33 2 118 197 531 4 4 1 3 2 1 3 4 4 1 2 7 4 .............................................................. 3 3,850 December 1,350 4,000 1,600 1,500 1,000 1,000 2,800 2,200 5,400 2,400 Associated Press .......................................................................... Bobbie Bro o ks Inc ....................................................................... Fedders Corp. Effingham .............................................................. G T E Sylvania Inc. Mass. & P a ........................................................ Indep. Restaurants and Taverns San Francisco ................................. Marhoefer Packing Co. M uncie ...................................................... N ew Y o rk Oil Heating Assn. N Y C ................................................. P D C A of St. Louis ....................................................................... United Airlines Pilots ................................................................... University of Michigan A n n A rb o r ................................................. Total: 10 situations ............................................................. . 23,250 Total: 30 2 situations .839,050 i l Se e a p p e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n o f codes. 73 23 34 36 58 20 50 17 45 82 00 00 33 00 93 32 21 43 00 34 323 134 196 484 145 155 531 164 104 193 4 4 1 4 3 1 2 2 4 1 Exp. date Company and location Number of workers Codes1 S IC State Union Unit Building construction— general contractors Mar. Apr. A G C Little R o c k Chapter ........................................................ A G C San A n to n io Chapter ........................................... A G C Southern Florida C h a p t e r ................ , ....................... . Utility and Sewer Contrs. Terre Haute ................ .................... A G C Central III. Chapter & 1 o t h e r ............................................ A G C K noxville Chapter .......................................................... A G C Kn o xville Chapter .......................................................... A G C M em ph is Chapter ............................................................ A G C M em ph is Chapter West Tenn. Barg. G ro u p ......................... A G C Michigan Chapter ............................................................ A G C M ichigan Chapter Labor Relations .................................... A G C M ichigan Chapter Saginaw ............................................... M ay June Aug. Assoc. Contrs. of O hio & A G C ................................................. B T E A Cleveland Chapter ........................................................ B T E A Cleveland Chapter ........................................................ B T E A Rochester Chapter ........................................................ Central Fla. Contrs. A ssn. O rlando ........................................... C onstruction Contrs. Council Wash., D .C .................................. C onstruction Contrs. Council Wash., D .C .................................. Independent Contrs. M aine ...................................................... Lehigh Valley Contrs. A ssn ...................................................... Q uad C ity Bldrs. Assn. R o c k Island .......................................... A G C Cincinnati Chapter .......................................................... A G C So. Fla. Chap, and 1 other Ft. Lauderdale ......................... A llied Constr. Em plrs. Assn. Milvraukee .................................... A llied Constr. Em plrs. A ssn. Inc. M ilw a u k e e ............................... A llied Constr, Industries Assn. C inn .................................. A rizona Genl. Contrs .............................................................. Associated Bldg. Contrs. of Bingham ton .................................... B T E A Rochester Chapter ........................................................ Builders A ssn, of Chicago ........................................................ Builders Assn, of Chicago & 1 other .......................................... Constr. Em plrs. Lab. Reis. N ew Y o rk Chapter ........................... Constr. Em plrs, of N orth Central West V a ................................. Detroit Mason Contrs. A ssn ..................................................... Genl. Contrs. of West V i r g i n i a ................................................... Mich. Conveyor Mfrs. Assn. Detroit .......................................... M id A m Regional Barg. A ssn. G ary ............................................ M id A m Regional Barg. Assn, of Chicago .................................. M id A m Regional Barg. Assn, o f Chicago .................................. N E C A Sacram ento Chapter ..................................................... N orth Central Constr. Em plrs. Council ...................................... Q uad C ity Builders Assn. R o c k Island ...................................... Will C o u n ty Contrs. & 1 other Joliet ........................................ A G C Shreveport Chapter ........................................................ B T E A of Western Mass. Springfield .......................................... A G C Birm ingham Chapter ...................................................... Indep. Contractors Ft. Lauderdale ........................................... Total: 4 8 situations 2300 1,000 1,500 5,000 13 0 0 2,000 1,250 1,200 2,300 1,000 1,100 2,000 2,000 3,600 3,600 1,000 2,200 5,300 1,800 1,000 1,000 1,200 1,600 2,000 3,150 1,200 1,500 7,000 1,200 1,500 5,000 20,000 1,900 1,000 1,500 3,000 1,100 2,400 4,0 0 0 2,000 1,100 2,000 1,400 1,600 1,300 1,400 1,650 1,200 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 71 74 59 32 33 62 62 62 62 34 34 34 31 31 31 21 59 53 53 11 23 33 31 59 35 35 31 86 21 21 33 33 21 55 34 55 34 32 33 33 93 21 33 33 72 14 63 59 143 143 129 143 143 143 119 143 119 143 119 119 129 164 170 115 143 119 129 119 119 143 129 129 143 115 143 119 143 119 115 143 129 119 143 143 119 119 129 143 127 119 119 143 119 119 143 11 5 2 2 2 3 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 ...................................................... . .. 118,450 Construction other than building construction_____________general contractors__________ Feb. B T E A Massachusetts Chapter ,. N ew England R o a d Bldrs. Maine 4.5 0 0 2.500 16 16 14 11 129 129 Exp. date Num ber of w orkers C o m p an y and location C o d e s1 S IC State U nio n U nit C onstruction other than building construction— general contractors— Continued Mar. Apr. M ay June Sept. 1,200 1,000 3,000 5,200 6,000 5,000 6,000 2,100 3,000 1,050 3,500 2,000 1,000 6,000 2,000 2,000 3,000 2,100 6,000 5,000 1,500 A G C Springfield .................................. A G C Central III. Bldrs. Div. Springfield . . . Contrs. Assn, of Eastern Pa. Phila ........... H ighw ay Constructors Inc .................... H ighw ay C onstructors Inc. Louisville Highw ay Constructors Inc. Louisville H ighw ay Constructors Inc. Louisville . . . . Montana Contrs. Assn ........................... N ew England R o a d Bldrs. Assn. Mass A G C Alabam a Chapter ......................... A G C A rizo n a Chapter ........................... Constr. Em plrs. Labor Reis. Rochester . . . Master Bldrs. Assn, of Western Pa ........... M id A m Regional Barg. Assn, of Chicago O hio Valley Bldrs. E x c h a n g e .................. W isconsin R o a d Bldrs. Assn. Milw aukee .. A G C Utah Chapter Statewide ................ A G C Utah Chapter Salt Lake C ity ......... H ighw ay Contrs. Inc ............................. M ichigan R oa d Bldrs. Assn. Lansing ....... O hio Valley Area Agm t. O hio Ky. & W. V a Total: 23 situations ... 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 33 33 23 61 61 61 61 81 14 63 86 21 23 33 55 35 87 87 61 34 00 143 129 143 119 143 119 143 129 531 143 129 143 119 129 129 143 143 119 129 143 112 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 74,650 C o nstructio n— special trade contractors Mar. Apr. M ay A G C N ew M exico Bldg. Branch Albuquerque N E C A Baltimore Chapter ....................... Northwest Line Constructors Pacific Coast . S M C A Portland Chapter ......................... Calif. C o n f. of M ason Contrs. Los Angeles . Em plo yin g Bricklayers Assn. Phila ........... Mason Contrs. Assn. Wash., D.C ............. Plumbing, Heating, & Piping San Jose ....... Plum bing Industry Contrs. Dade C o u n ty . . San Diego Plastering & Lathing ................ S M C A C olum bus Chapter ........................ A G C Detroit Chapter ............................. A G C M ich. Chapter Bldrs. Assn. & 1 other . A ir Cond. & Refrig. Contrs. Assn. M ilw . . . Assoc. Brick Masons, Mason Contrs. N Y C . Chicago R o o fin g Contrs. A ssn ................ Eastern N Y Constr. Em plrs. A lba n y ......... Electrical Contrs. of Santa Clara ............... Foundation & Marine Contrs. Assn. New ton III. R oa d Bldrs. Assn. Concrete Contrs. Chic Mason Contrs. Assn, of Allegheny C o u n ty . Mason Contrs. of Detroit ....................... Master Plasterers Assn. Boston ................ Mech. Contrs. Assn, of Chicago ............... M id -O hio Valley Industry Contrs. & A G C .. N E C A Cincinnati Chapter ....................... N E C A Lo s Angeles ................................. N E C A Minneapolis Chapter .................... N E C A N orth Central Chapter Indianapolis . 1,000 1,200 1,800 1,150 2,000 2,000 1,000 1,400 1,000 1,800 1,400 2,000 5,000 1,000 6,500 1,200 1,000 1,550 2,000 1,900 1,050 2,300 1,000 4,500 1,500 1,100 6,000 1,600 1,100 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 85 52 90 92 93 23 53 93 59 93 31 34 34 35 21 33 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 33 21 93 14 23 34 14 33 31 31 93 41 32 116 127 127 187 115 115 115 170 170 143 187 168 115 170 115 185 116 127 143 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 168 115 115 143 170 119 127 127 127 127 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Exp. Num ber of w orkers C o m p an y and location date Codes S IC State U n io n U nit C o nstructio n— special trade contractors— Continued June July Aug. Sept. Dec. N E C A O akland Chapter ............................. N E C A San Diego Chapter ........................... N E C A San Francisco ................................. N E C A Southern Nevada Chapter ................ P D C A Milwaukee Chapter ......................... Reinforced Steel Contrs. Assn. Detroit ......... R o o fin g & Sheet Metal Contrs. of Boston . . . . Seattle Plum bing & Pipe Em plrs .................. A ir C o nditioning Contrs. Phoenix ................ A G C of So. Calif. San Diego & Lo s Angeles .. A G C Providence Chapter ........................... A rizo n a M aso n ry Contrs. Assn. Phoenix ....... Assn, of Plum bing Mech. Contrs. Sacram ento . Genl. Contrs. Bldg. & Mason Contrs. N Y C . . . ....... Glass Managem ent Assn. San Francisco H udson Valley Constr. Em plrs. New burgh . . . Mech. Contrs. of Westchester Y o n k e rs ......... N E C A G rand R apids .................................. N E C A Phoenix .......................................... N E C A W ashington, D .C ............................. P D C A Oregon and Southw est W ashington . . . U nion Painting Contrs. Assn. D e n v e r ............. Utah Plum bing Contrs. Salt Lake C ity ......... Assn, of Mechanical Contrs. Atlanta ............. H ouston Sheet Metal Contrs ........................ N E C A Atlanta .......................................... N E C A Jersey C ity ...................................... N E C A Orange C o u n t y ................................. Plum bing & Mechanical Contrs. H a w a i i ......... Constr. Em plrs. Assn. & Mech. Contrs. H ouston Mechanical Contrs. of H ouston & 1 other . . . . P D C A Miam i ............................................. P D C A of St. Lou is .................................... 1,350 1,500 1,400 1,100 1,400 5,000 1,700 1,500 1,400 2,500 1,300 1,150 1,100 3,000 1,100 2,150 1,050 1,200 1,600 2,300 3,500 1,400 1,000 1,400 1,200 1,700 1,100 1,800 1,250 5,200 1,000 2,000 2,200 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 17 17 17 17 93 93 93 88 35 34 14 91 86 93 15 86 93 21 93 21 21 34 86 53 90 84 87 58 74 58 22 93 95 74 74 59 43 127 127 127 127 164 116 187 170 187 170 119 115 170 143 164 116 170 127 127 127 164 164 170 170 187 127 127 127 170 170 170 164 164 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 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 . . . 117,600 Total: 6 2 situations Ordnance and accessories Feb. 1,000 Rem ington A rm s Co. Inc. Bridgeport 19 16 500 1 1,000 Total: 1 situation F o o d and kindred products Apr. F & M Shaefer Brew ing Co. N ew Y o rk C ity .. 1,650 20 21 531 1 M ay June Seattle Area Bakeries ................................. Associated Brewers, Inc. Baltimore .............. Sunshine Biscuit Co. Sayreville .................... Standard Brands Inc. C linton . ..................... 1,000 1,500 1,000 1,000 1,350 1,300 2,000 1,200 1,000 20 20 20 20 20 20 91 52 21 42 61 74 531 531 108 20 8 155 3 93 43 32 108 155 155 155 3 20 20 20 July Aug. Sept. Oct. Dec. Fischer Packing Co. & Klarer Louisville ....... Machine S h o p Bakeries Dallas ...................... Pacific Coast Meat Jobbers Assn. San Francisco Krey Packing Co. St. Louis ......................... Marhoefer Packing Co. M uncie .................... Total: 10 situations 13,000 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 Exp. date C o m p an y and location N um ber of w orkers C o d e s1 S IC State U nio n U nit 337 337 337 337 1 1 2 1 Textile mill products Feb* Apr. July Oct. Stearns & Foster Lo cklan d ................................. * ................... Bates Mfg. Cd. Inc. A ugusta ........... ................... .............. .. G uild Y arn L ib o r Conference N Y C ................ M idland R o ss Corp. Painesvilli ................................................ Total: 4 S itu a tio n s ....... ................................................ .. 1,100 1,750 1,000 1,250 22 22 ?2 22 31 11 21 31 5,100 Apparel and other finished products made from fabrics and similar materials Mar. May June July Aug. Sept. Dec. MiSty Harbor Shop* Baltimore .......................... ................. R St M Kaufmann Co ............................. ............................. Empire State Cloth Hat & Cap Millinery ................. ............. Kansas City Garment Mfrs ............. ......................... . Knit Mfrs. of New Jersey ................................................ New England Clothing & Rainwear Boston .............................. Wentworth Mfg. Co. Florence ........................ .................... Lohdontown Mfg. Co .......................... .. , ....................... Cotton City Wash. Frocks Inc ............................................... Outerwear Manufacturers Nationwide ............................. . Shirt Fajamas Pants St Oth Cotton Mfrs ............................. Bobbie Brooks Inc .................. ....................................... 1,200 1,500 1,b00 1,300 3,000 1,000 1,500 1,750 2 ,bo o 16,000 8 0,000 4 ,000 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 52 40 00 43 22 14 57 50 50 00 00 00 134 134 305 134 134 134 134 305 134 305 305 134 4 4 2 2 2 2 1 4 1 3 3 4 Total: 12 situations........................................ ........... . . . 114,250 Lum ber and w oo d products, except furniture Jan. Apr* June Weyerhaeuser Co. Dierks D iv ........................ ........................ . Lum ber 8t M ill Em ployers A s s r i ........................................ . Quaker C ity Lum ber Products A ssn .................................... Master Stair Builders A ssn ...................... ......... ............... Total: 4 situations 3,000 1,000 1,500 1,000 24 24 24 24 70 93 23 21 343 119 119 119 4 2 2 2 6,500 Paper and allied products Jan. M ay June Owens Illinois, Inc. L ily T u lip C up Hoerner W aldorf C o rp .................... Scott Paper West Cbast Div. W ashington . Container Corp. of Am erica ................ Packaging Corp. of Am erica ................ Scott Paper Co. Northeast D i v .............. July Brow n Co. Kalam azoo ........... ......... Brow n Co. Parchment K V P Div. Michigan Sept. B ox Assn, of Am erica ............ ........... Cosm opolitan Tw ine & Paper A ssn ....... Total: 10 situations 1,400 1,100 1,350 2,500 1,000 1,000 1,200 1,050 1,200 1,350 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 22 41 91 00 31 11 34 34 21 21 244 231 527 231 231 231 231 231 531 531 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 2 2 13,150 Printing, publishing, and allied industries Apr. June Milwaukee Lithographers A ssn Spartan Printing C o ............. Total: 2 situations . 1,300 1,400 2,700 27 27 35 33 243 100 2 1 Exp. date Num ber of w orkers C o m p an y and location C o d e s1 S IC State U n io n U nit Chem icals and allied products Feb. Mar. Apr. M ay Nov. 1,100 2,250 2,250 4,7 0 0 1,200 1,700 1,000 E I Du Pont De N em ours & Co. Io w a .............. E I Du Pont De N em ours & Co. Ke n tu cky .. E I D u Pont De N em ours 6tdo. Virginia .. . E I D u Pont De N em ours & Co. N ew Jersey U nion Carbide Corp. Nuclear D iv ............. E I D u Pont De N em ours & Co. Virginia . . . Cl B A Geigy Corp. M c In to sh .................... . .. Total: 7 situations 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 42 61 54 22 61 54 63 600 500 5 00 500 357 500 367 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 14,200 R ubber dnd miscellaneous plastics products June Aug. Sept. Oct. Plastics Products Mfrs. Assn. N e w Y o r k C ity Electric Hose & Rubber Co. W ilm ington .. W estinghouse Electric Corp. H a m p t o n ....... Seiberling R ubb er Co. Barberton ............. Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. Findlay ........... Total: 5 situations , 1,000 1,200 1,000 1,000 1,000 . .. 30 30 30 30 30 21 51 57 31 31 134 333 119 33 3 333 2 1 1 1 1 5,200 Leather and leather products Oct. Nov. Quality Shoe M frs Florsheim Co. Chicago 3,000 1,100 Total: 2 situations , . .. 31 31 21 33 33 4 3 34 4 1 4,100 Stone, clay, glass, and concrete products Apr. Aug. 1,150 2,500 O wens C orning Fiberglass Co. A nderson .. Dresser Industries Harbison-W alker Refrac Total: 2 situations .............................................................. 32 32 57 00 135 114 1 4 553 161 107 1 3 1 3,650 Prim ary metal industries Feb. Apr. Oct. 1,500 3,300 Engelhard Minerals & Chem icals New ark .. Chicago Area Foundries ........................ Sheller-Glove Corp. H ardy Div. U n io n C ity 1,000 33 33 33 22 33 32 5,800 Total: 3 situations Fabricated metal products, except ordnance, m achinery, and transportation equipm ent Apr. July M o du lu s C o rp ......................................................................... Babcock & W ilcox C o ........................................ .................... M irro A lu m in u m Co. M a n it o w a C ............................................... Sept. Crane Co. C h i c a g o ................................................................... Structural Steel & Ornamental Iron Em plrs ............................... M id land -Ross Corp. C le v e la n d ................................................... Scovill Mfrs. Co. W aterbury ..................................................... Fedders Corp. Effingham ........................................................ Oct. Dec. 1,000 1,100 1,800 1,200 1,000 1,300 3,000 1,600 Total: 8 s itu a tio n s .......................................................... ... .. j 12,000 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 00 00 35 33 22 31 16 33 335 112 335 335 116 553 553 196 4 4 1 1 2 1 1 1 Exp. date C o m p an y and location N um ber of w orkers C o d e s1 S IC State U nio n U nit M achinery, except electrical June July Brunsw ick Corp. M ercury Div. Fo n d D u Lac W estinghouse Electric Corp. B loom ington 3,200 1,100 35 35 35 41 218 335 1 1 4,3 0 0 Total: 2 situations Electrical m achinery, equipm ent, and supplies June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. General Electric Co .................................. General Electric Co. Drafting Dept ............. General Electric Co. Service Sh op s ............. Am ana Refrigeration Inc. A m ana .............. Lighting Fixture Mfrs. Lo s Angeles ............. W estinghouse Electric Corp. Y o u n g w o o d . . . Chicago Lighting Equipm ent M f r s .............. Electrical Machine Mfg. Minneapolis ........... Electro M otive Corp. Florence .................. Bendix Corp. F o s t o r i a ............................... General M otors Corp. Delco Products D ayton General M o tors Corp. Fridgidaire D ayton IT T A vio n ics & Defense C om m unications . .. G T E Sylvania Inc. Seneca Falls .................. Allis-Chalm ers Corp. Pa. & A la .................. G T E Sylvania Inc. Mass. & N ew Y o rk ......... G T E Sylvania Inc. Pennsylvania ................ G T E Sylvania Inc. Mass. & Pa .................... Total: 18 situations ....................... 15,500 3,000 4 ,000 1,600 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,400 1,150 1,600 7,000 1,000 1,300 1,150 1,700 2,000 1,500 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 00 00 00 42 93 23 33 41 57 31 31 31 20 21 00 00 23 00 218 105 100 218 127 127 127 347 346 553 347 347 347 335 553 347 218 484 4 4 4 1 3 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 7 ,9 0 0 Transportation equipm ent June Sept. 1,000 1,100 1,800 Dayton-W alther Corp. D ayton Chrysler Corp. Plant Guards . . Fo rd M o to r Corp. Plant Guards 37 37 37 31 00 00 335 461 553 1 4 4 3,900 Total: 3 s itu a tio n s ....... Professional, scientific, and controlling instruments; photographic and optical goods; watches and clocks Aug. Sperry R an d Corp. Sperry Gyroscope Total: 1 situation ............................................................... 1,000 38 21 347 1 181 358 4 4 1,000 Railroad transportation June July Lo n g Island R a i l r o a d ............................................................... L o n g Island R a i l r o a d ............................................................... 1,200 1,350 Total: 2 s itu a tio n s .......................................................... 2,550 40 40 21 21 Local and suburban transit and internrban passenger transportation Mar. M a n h a tta n 81 B r o n x S u rfa c e T ra n sp . N Y C ..................................... N ew Y o rk Transit A u th o rity N Y C ............................................ 5,350 3 1,700 41 41 21 21 341 341 5 5 Exp. date Num ber of w orkers C o m p an y and location C o d e s1 S IC State U n io n U nit Local and suburban transit and interurban passenger transportation— Continued Apr. M ay June July Sept. Nov. Queens Lines Inc. N Y C ............................... W ashington M etrop Area T r a n s i t .................. Southern Calif. R apid Transit L o s Angeles .. . Municipal Railw ay Co. San Francisco ........... N ew Y o rk C ity Transit A u th o rity ................ Bay Area R ap id Transit San Francisco ......... Cleveland Transit System ........................... Dade C o u n ty Transit Miam i ........................ N ew Y o rk Transit A u th o rity Su bw ay N Y C . .. Port A u th o rity of Allegheny C o u n ty Pittsburgh Total: 12 situations 1,150 3,000 3,200 1,800 1,500 1,100 1,700 1,100 4,2 0 0 2,600 . .. 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 21 50 93 93 21 93 31 59 21 23 341 197 5 7 358 341 193 100 197 341 5 0 5 5 5 6 0 7 500 197 58,400 M o to r freight transportation and w arehousing Jan. Aug. Oct. Nov. Five Apparel T ru ckin g Em plrs. Agm t. N Y C A ir Freight Co. & 2 others N Y C ............. United Parcel Service ........................... Eastern Labor A dviso ry A ssn ................ Total: 4 situations 1,500 2,600 3,200 2,500 . .. 42 42 42 42 21 21 93 00 134 531 531 531 3 3 4 2 154 2 104 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 9,800 Water transportation Jan. 2,000 Northw est Tow boat Assn Total: 1 situation .. 44 91 2,000 A ir transportation Jan. Feb. July Aug. Oct. Nov. Dec. 1,500 1,300 3,050 3,000 1,300 4 ,0 0 0 1,100 1,900 5,400 A ir West Clerical ...................... O zark Airlines Office-Clerical .. . Delta A irlines Pilots ................ Northw est A irlines Clerical-Office Braniff A irw ays Pilots ............... Eastern A irlines Flight Attendants Allegheny A irlines Pilots ........... Western A irlines G ro u n d Service . United Airlines Pilots .............. Total: 9 situations ... 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 218 104 183 104 341 104 531 104 22,550 Electric, gas, and sanitary services M ay June Aug. Niagara M o h aw k Power C o rp ....... Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co Kansas City Power and Light Co . . . United Illum inating Co. Connecticut Total: 4 situations 7,200 1,150 2,150 1,000 49 49 49 49 21 70 47 16 127 357 127 342 4 4 4 4 332 531 2 2 11,500 Wholesale trade Apr. Assn, of U p tow n Converters N Y C Seattle Warehouse Distributors .. 1,000 2,500 50 50 21 91 Exp. date N um ber of w orkers C o m p an y and location C o d e s1 S IC State U n io n U nit Wholesale trade— C ontinued M ay Dec. 2,500 2,800 Wholesale Beer Distributors A ssn N ew Y o rk Oil Heating Assn. N Y C 50 50 93 21 531 531 2 2 8,800 Total : 4 situations Retail trade— general merchandise Jan. M ay July 1,000 8,500 3,000 Federal Dept. Stores Inc Tw o G u ys N.J. Md. and Pa .. S Klein Dept. Stores Inc. N Y C ... Total: 3 situations 53 53 53 30 00 21 305 184 332 4 4 4 12,500 Retail trade-— fo o d stores Feb. Apr. M ay June Aug. Sept. Oct. 1,000 1,000 9,650 3,000 4,0 0 0 4 ,400 3,000 3,000 27,000 3,000 1,000 2,000 1,500 7,000 1,400 1,800 Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores G rocery Eugene F o o d Mart/W aldbaum s Mass. & C onn ....... F o o d Superm arkets N ew Y o rk C ity (4) J. Weingarten Grocery Su p p ly H ouston . . . Major Superm arkets (3) in Indiana ........... Major Superm arkets (5) in Kansas C ity Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores .................... Chain & Indep. F o o d Stores Iow a & III Chain & Indep. Fo o d Stores Ind. & I I I ....... F o o d Em plrs. Labor R e la t io n s .................. G rand U n io n Co .................................... F o o d Empire. Council Inc ........................ A & P Tea Co. Mass, and M a i n e ................ Fo o d Empire. Council Inc. Los Angeles A & P Tea Co. and 1 other ...................... Chain & Indep. G rocery Stores Santa Clara . Total: 16 s itu a tio n s ........................ ... 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 92 10 21 74 32 43 33 00 30 00 16 93 10 93 50 93 184 155 184 531 184 184 184 184 184 531 155 218 184 531 184 155 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 2 4 2 4 2 4 3 73,750 Retail trade— apparel and accessory stores June 4,5 0 0 W om en's Apparel Chains Assn. N Y C Total: 1 situation .............. ... 56 21 134 2 4 ,500 Retail trade— eating and d rinking places M ay Aug. Dec. W ashington Restaurants & Bars W hatcom . . . Golden Gate Restaurant Assn. San Francisco . Indep. Restaurants and Taverns San Francisco Total : 3 situations 1,000 4,0 0 0 1,000 58 58 58 91 93 93 145 145 145 3 2 3 6,000 Retail trade— miscellaneous retail stores Sept. Th rifty D rug & others Total: 1 situation 1,100 1,100 59 93 184 3 Exp. date Number of workers Company and location Codes S IC State Union Unit Real estate Apr. June 2.500 1.500 Realty A d viso ry Bd. Lab. Reis. N Y C Realty A d viso ry Bd. Lab. Reis. N Y C 65 65 21 21 118 118 2 2 Total: 2 situations Hotels, rooming houses, camps, and other lodging places June Sept. 3,000 3,800 Greater Milw. Hotel-Motel A ssn Hotel Em plrs. Assn, of Hawaii . Total: 2 s itu a tio n s ....... . .. 70 70 35 95 145 480 2 2 6,800 Miscellaneous business services Apr. Aug. Dec. 1,500 1,200 1,350 Direct Mailmaster Contract N ew Y o rk Burns Intern Security Service N Y C . . Associated P r e s s ............................. 73 73 73 21 21 00 332 494 323 2 1 4 4,050 Total: 3 s itu a tio n s ................ Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages Nov. 1,000 Garage & Parking Lot Agm t. San Francisco Total: 1 situation ........................ .. . 75 93 531 3 192 3 1,000 Motion pictures Nov. 2,000 D istribution & Film Service Cos. N Y C Total: 1 situation ................ . .. 78 21 2,000 Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures Feb. Walt D isney Productions Anaheim Total: 1 situation ........... 3.500 79 93 100 1 3.500 Medical and other health services June Oct. Nov. Municipal Hospitals A ides N Y C ......... . Albert Einstein College of Medicine N Y C Johns H o p k in s Univ. Hosp. & Others Balt M etrop N ew Y o rk N ursing Hom es N Y C , Total: 4 s itu a tio n s .................... . 16,000 1,600 3,800 12,000 80 80 80 80 21 21 52 21 193 332 332 118 4 1 1 2 193 1 33,400 Educational services Dec. University of M ichigan A n n A rb o r Total: 1 situation ........... Total: 3 0 2 situations 2.400 2.400 839,050 82 34 co d e 1 J a n u a r y ......... 20 A d o lp h C oors Co. (Golden, Colo.) Brewery, Bottling and A llied Industrial U nio n (directly affiliated local) 1,650 49 Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (California) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 14,950 49 Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (California) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 3,800 28 U nion Carbide Corp. (Institute, W. Va.) Machinists 1,200 89 A ro, Inc. (A rn o ld A ir Force Station, Tenn.) Metal Trades Council 1,500 53 R. H. M acy and Co., Bam berger's Div. (New Jersey) Retail Clerks 1,700 38 Honeyw ell, Inc. (Minneapolis, Minn.) Teamsters (Ind.) 7,000 49 Com m onw ealth Edison Co., production and maintenance (Illinois) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 6,750 49 Com m onw ealth Edison Co., clerical (Illinois) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 3,500 20 Delmarva Poultry Processors Association (Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia) Meat Cutters; Teamsters (Ind.) 2,000 28 Atlantic Richfield H anford Co. (Richland, Wash.) Hanford A to m ic Metal Trades Council (Ind.) 1,050 30 Form ica Corp. (Cincinnati, O hio) Electrical W orkers (IU E ) 1,100 16 Pipe Line Contractors A ssociation (interstate) Plumbers 45 Western Airlines, ground service (interstate)3 Teamsters (Ind.) 1,900 80 Associated Hospitals of East Bay (California) Service Em ployees 3,000 73 Building Service League (New Y o rk ) Service Em ployees 4 ,500 20 Campbell S o u p Co. (Sacram ento, Calif.) Teamsters (Ind.) 1,800 49 Central Maine Power Co. (Maine) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 1,100 28 Hercules, Inc.(R adford, Va.) Oil, Chemical and A to m ic W orkers 2,050 17 Associated General Contractors (Alaska)3 Carpenters 1,500 15 Associated General Contractors (Alaska) Teamsters (Ind.) 5,000 53 Gimbel Brothers, Inc. (N ew Y o rk and New Jersey)3 Retail, Wholesale and Departm ent Store 4,5 0 0 49 C olum bus and Southern O hio Electric Co. (Ohio) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 1,550 26 Potlatch Corp. (Minnesota) Paperworkers; and Firemen and Oilers 1,600 35 Sperry R an d Corp. (Joplin, M o .)3 A llied Industrial W orkers 1,000 F e b r u a r y ....... March ........... April ............. M a y .............. June ............. S IC A pp roxim ate num ber of M o n th of reopening C o m p an y and location U n io n 2 w orkers covered 10,000 S IC code1 M o n th of reopening C o m p an y and location U nio n 2 A pproxim ate num ber of w orkers covered June— Continued 28 U n io n Carbide Corp. (Oak Ridge, Tenn.) A to m ic Trades and Labor Council, and its affiliate M achinists 2,700 28 U nion Carbide Corp. (Texas City, Tex.)3 Texas C ity, Texas Metal Trades Council 1,600 34 C om bustion Engineering, Inc. (Chattanooga, Tenn.) Boilerm akers 3,250 58 East Bay Restaurant Association, Inc. (California) Hotel and Restaurant Em ployees 8,000 54 Meijer, Inc. (M ichigan)3 Consolidated Independent U nion (Ind.) 6,450 20 Am erican Crystal Sugar Co. (interstate) Grain Millers 2,200 17 A rizona Steel Field Erectors A ssociation (Arizona) Iron W orkers 1,500 33 N L Industries, Inc. (interstate) A u to W orkers (Ind.) 3,400 20 Michigan Sugar Co. (Michigan) Grain Millers 1,100 September . . . . 20 Oscar Mayer and Co., Inc. (Chicago, III.)3 Meat Cutters 1,150 ....... 26 Greater N ew Y o rk Fold ing B o x and D isp lay M a n u facturers Association, Inc. (New Y o r k and Paperworkers 1,600 July ............. A u g u s t ........... October 3 N ew Jersey)3 23 Levi Strauss and Co. (Knoxville, K y .)3 Garm ent W orkers 2,000 Novem ber . . . . 20 General Fo o d s Corp. (Battle Creek, M ich.)3 Retail, Wholesale and Departm ent Store 1,600 December . . . . 49 M em ph is Light, Gas, and Water D ivision (Tennessee)3 Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 2,400 Se e a p p e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n o f codes. U n io n affiliate d w ith A F L -C IO , e x ce p t in d e p e n d e n t (In d .). w h ere n oted as N e w sp a p e r source. A pp ro xim ate num ber of w orkers covered M o n th of expiration S IC code2 F e b r u a r y ....... 23 Jonathan Logan,Inc. (interstate) Ladies' Garm ent W orkers 7,200 March ........... 36 Cutler-Ham m er,Inc. (Milw aukee, Wise.) Machinists 1,200 £pr«l ............. 15 Associated General Contractors bf East Tennessee, Bricklayers; Carpenters; Cement Masons; Team sters (Ind.), Operating Engineers; Ironw orkers and Laborers 1,500 C o m p an y and location U n io n 3 Inc. (Tennessee and N o rth Carolina) 17 California Conference of Mason Contractors Association (L o s Angeles, Calif.) Bricklayers 2,000 15 Construction Contractors C ouncil, Inc. of W ash ington, D.C. (interstate) Carpenters 9,000 16 General Contractors A ssociation of Lehigh Valley, Inc. (Pennsylvania) Laborers 1,050 27 Printing Industry of Metropolitan New Y o rk , Inc. (N ew Y o rk ) Printing and Graphic 1,500 55 Standard Oil Co., Standard Stations, Inc. (interstate) Western States Service Stations Em ployees U nio n (Ind.) 1,500 15 Associated General Contractors, O hio Building Chapter (interstate) Laborers 1,450 15 Construction Em ployers Labor Relations Association of N ew Y o rk State, Inc. (Syracuse, N.Y.) Laborers 1,200 49 Kansas City Power and Light Co. (Kansas City, Mo.) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 1,050 17 Utah Plum bing-Heating-Cooling Contractors A ssociation (Utah) Plumbers 1,000 J u l y .............. 49 Kansas Power and Light Co. (Kansas) Electrical W orkers (IB E W ) 1,000 A u g u s t ........... 23 Lo n d o n to w n Corp. (interstate) C lothing W orkers 1,750 M a y ............... June ............. E x p ir a t io n s rep orted to o late to be in clu d e d in tables. S e e a p p e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n o f codes. 3 U n io n in d e p e n d e n t a ffiliate d (In d .). w ith A F L -C IO , e x ce p t w h ere n ote d as A ppendix 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 - California - Chicago - Cincinnati - Cleveland - Connecticut - Consolidated MECH METRO MFRS MICH MINPLS MINN NATL NEW ENG NJ NY - Continental - General - Industry area (group of companies signing PHILA PITTSB SAN FRAN same contract) - Illinois - Independent - Industrial - International - Los Angeles - Massachusetts NO NORTHW PA SO SOUTHE SQUTHW STRUCT US WASH WEST VA wis - 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 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 19 O rd nance and a ccessories 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 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 Railroad transportation Local and suburban transit and interurban passenger transportation Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation Air transportation Communication Electric, gas, and sanitary services Wholesale trade 39 40 41 42 44 45 48 49 50 SIC Codes— Continued 52 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— building materials, hardware, and farm equipment dealers Retail trade— general merchandise Retail trade— food stores Retail trade— automotive dealers and gasoline service stations Retail trade— apparel and accessory stores Retail trade— furniture, home furnishings, and equipment stores Retail trade— eating and drinking places Retail trade— miscellaneous retail stores Banking Credit agencies other than banks Security and commodity brokers, dealers, 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 10 NEW ENGLAND REGION 11 Maine 12 New Hampshire 13 Vermont 50 SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION— Continued 57 South Carolina 58 Georjpa 59 Florida 14 Massachusetts 15 Rhode Island 16 Connecticut 20 MIDDLE ATLANTIC 21 New York 22 New Jersey 23 Pennsylvania 30 EAST NORTH CENTRAL REGION 31 Ohio 32 Indiana 33 Illinois 34 Michigan 35 Wisconsin 40 WEST NORTH CENTRAL REGION 41 Minnesota 42 Iowa 43 Missouri 44 North Dakota 45 South Dakota 46 Nebraska 47 Kansas 50 SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION 51 Delaware 52 Maryland 53 District of Columbia 6Q EAST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION 61 Kentucky 62 Tennessee 63 Alabama 64 Mississippi 70 WEST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION 71 Arkansas 72 Louisiana 73 Oklahoma 74 Texas 80 MOUNTAIN REGION 81 Montana 82 Idaho 83 Wyoming 84 Colorado 85 New Mexico 86 Arizona 87 Utah 88 Nevada 90 PACIFIC REGION 91 Washington 92 Oregon 93 California 94 Alaska 95 Hawaii 54 Virginia 55 West Virginia 56 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, SO, 90) is used where an agreement covers employees or operations in two States or more but does not go beyond the limits o f the regions. The interstate code (00) is used where the agreement covers employees or operations in two States or more in more than one region. 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 112 114 115 116 118 119 120 121 124 126 127 128 129 131 132 133 134 135 137 1139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 150 152 153 154 155 158 161 Two or more AFL—CIO unions Directly affiliated unions of the AFL—CIO Actors Air line Dispatchers Air Line Pilots Engineers; Professional and Technical Asbestos Workers Industrial Workers; Allied Bakery Workers Barbers Boilermakers Brick and Clay Workers Bricklayers Iron Workers Service Employees Carpenters Cement Workers Chemical Workers Coopers Distillery Workers Electrical Workers (IBEW) Elevator Constructors Engineers; Operating Fire Fighters Firemen and Oilers Garment Workers; United Garment Workers; Ladies’ Glass Bottle Blowers Glass Workers; Flint Government Employees Granite Cutters Leather, Plastic, and Novelty Workers Hatters Laborers Horseshoers Hotel and Restaurant Employees Jewelry Workers Lathers Letter Carriers Maintenance of Way Employes Marble, Slate, and Stone Polishers Masters, Mates, and Pilots Meat Cutters Metal Polishers Molders Union codes 100-400 are affiliated with AFL-CIO. 162 163 164 166 168 169 170 174 178 180 181 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 192 193 196 197 199 201 202 203 204 205 208 210 215 218 220 221 231 232 233 236 238 239 241 243 244 305 Musicians Office Employees Painters Pattern Makers Plasterers and Cement Masons Plate Printers Plumbers Potters Railroad Signalmen Railroad Yardmasters Railway Carmen Railway Qerks Retail Qerks Roofers Seafarers Sheet Metal Workers Shoe Workers; Boot and Siderographers Porters; Sleeping Car Stage Employees State, County, and Municipal Employees Stove Workers Transit Union; Amalgamated Teachers Telegraphers Textile Workers; United Tobacco Workers Typographical Union Upholsterers Grain Millers Match Workers Council F ligh t E ngineers Machinists Aluminum Workers Toy Workers Paperworkers Train Dispatchers Railway and Airline Supervisors Laundry and Dry Qeaning Union Insurance Workers Longshoremen’s Association Farm Workers of America; United Graphic Arts Printing and Graphic Clothing Workers 312 314 319 320 321 323 332 333 334 335 337 341 342 343 345 346 347 352 354 356 357 358 360 400 404 412 414 415 417 419 423 425 442 449 454 461 465 469 470 480 484 490 494 500 516 Furniture Workers Glass and Ceramic Workers Marine Engineers Marine and Shipbuilding Workers Maritime Union; National Newspaper Guild Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Rubber Workers Shoe Workers; United Steelworkers Textile Workers Union Transport Workers Utility Workers Woodworkers Radio Association Communications Workers Electrical Workers (IUE) Broadcast Employees and Technicians Mechanics Educational Society Leather Workers Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Transportation Union; United Postal Workers Two or more independent unions Die Sinkers Lace Operatives Insurance Agents Locomotive Engineers Machine Printers Mailers Distributive Workers Newspaper and Mail Deliverers Shoe Craftsmen Watch Workers Mine Workers Guard Workers; Plant Christian Labor Association Utility Workers of New England Atlantic Independent Union Longshoremen and Warehousemen Electrical Workers (UE) Protection Employees; Plant Watchmen’s Association Single-firm independent union Telephone Unions; Independent 1 Union codes 100-400 are affiliated with AFL-CIO. 517 B aseball P layers 518 B asketball Players 519 H o ck ey P layers 520 F o o tb a ll P layers 521 U m p ires 524 P ack in gh ou se and Dairy 526 P rofession al Services W orkers 527 P ulp and Paper; W estern 528 S o u th ern Labor U n io n 529 W estern S ta tes Serivce 530 Writers G uild (E ast and W est) 531 .533 T eam sters L au n d ry, Dry C lean in g, and D y e h o u se W orkers 534 T o o l C raftsm en 535 Industrial W orkers 536 Industrial Trade 537 Trades and Crafts 538 In d ep en d en t U n io n s; C ongress o f 539 R etail W orkers 540 D irectors G uild 541 G uards U n io n 542 T ruck Drivers; C hicago 543 A llied W orkers 547 L icen sed O ffic e r s’ O rganization; 551 T e x tile F o r e m e n ’s G uild 553 A u to W orkers 600 T w o or m o re u n io n s— d iffe r e n t G reat L akes a ffilia tio n s ( i.e .. A F L —CIO and in d e p e n d e n t u n io n s) 701 E ngineers and A rch itects 702 Industrial Trades 704 O ffic e , Sales and T ech n ica l E m p lo y e e s 705 S h oe w orkers P ro tectiv e A sso c ia tio n 708 T exas U n io n s 715 Industrial U n io n ; A m algam ated 717 M ine W orkers; P rogressive 824 T ech n ical S k ills A sso c ia tio n 903 N urses; A m erican 904 L icen sed P ractical N urses 905 N u rses’ a sso c ia tio n s (o th e r th an A N A and N F L P M ) 906 D o c to r s ’ a sso ic a tio n s 907 Single in d e p e n d e n t a sso ic a tio n s 908 A sso c ia tio n an d u n io n 909 970 Education Association: National University Professors Employer Units 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. A ppendix C . Explanatory Note Data shown in tables 9 and 10 of this bulletin, listing individual collective bargaining agreements on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, differ from the totals presented earlier in tables 1 and 2 for a variety of reasons. Data in tables 1 and 2 include, in addition to those agreements on file, information on collective bargaining agreements from other sources, such as press accounts and direct communication with union and management. Additionally, a collective bar gaining situation included in tables 1 and 2 is defined as a bargaining unit covering a total of 1,000 workers or more. The results of bargaining in such a unit, when for example multi-employer or multi-union groups are involved, may be two or more separate collective bargaining agreements each affecting fewer than 1,000 workers. In such cases, the agreements are jointly negotiated and have uniform terms including a common expiration date. Differences may also exist in employment coverage, asjtables 9 and 10 reflect employment data obtained at the time the contract is received by the Bureau, while tables 1 and 2 reflect the most recent employment data available at the time this bulletin was prepared. Changes in worker coverage totals, in turn, may result in changes in the number of situations classified as “major,” that is, those applying to 1,000 workers or more. Finally, contracts covering the railroad and airline industries are not included in the Bureau’s agreement file, but are included in tables 1 and 2. To reconcile the differences between data presented in tables 9 and 10 and in 1 and 2, supplemental tables 11 and 12 have been prepared. They list situations included in tables 1 and 2, but not 9 and 10, and are based upon the concepts used in preparing the former tables. Because of the reasons listed earlier regarding em ploym ent differences, absolute comparability is not possible. However, the supplemental tables do aid in reconciling differences between the two series of data. Reissued by Popular Demand Input-Output Structure of the II.S. Economv: 1007 Second Printing From the U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, Bureau of Economic Analysis Get the detailed input-output tables for 367 industries from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. □ Volume 1—Transactions Data for Detailed Industries, $3.85 C56.109/4:ln 7/967 Vol. 1 □ Volume 2—Direct Requirements for Detailed Industries, $3.75 C56.109/4:ln 7/967 Vol. 2 □ Volume 3 —Total Requirements for Detailed Industries, $3.75 C56.109/4:ln 7/967 Vol. 3 Specify the volumes desired and indicate the catalog number and major title, Input-Output Structure of the U.S. Economy: 1967. Make check payable to the Superintendent of Documents. ☆ U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1976 O - 210-882 (101) BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS REGIONAL OFFICES Region V Region I 1 6 0 3 J F K Federal B u ild in g G o ve rn m e n t Center B osto n , Mass. 0 2 2 0 3 Phone: (617) 223 -6 7 6 1 9 th F lo o r Federal O ffic e B u ild in g 2 3 0 S. D e arb o rn Street C hica go , III. 6 0 6 0 4 Phone: (31 2 ) 3 5 3 -1 8 8 0 Region II Su ite 3 4 0 0 1 5 1 5 B ro a d w a y N ew Y o r k , N .Y . 1 0 0 3 6 Phone: (212) 9 7 1 -5 4 0 5 Reaion III S e c o n d F lo o r 5 5 5 G riffin Square B u ild in g Dallas, Te x. 7 5 2 0 2 Phone: (21 4 ) 7 4 9 -3 5 1 6 Regions V II and V I I I * 911 W alnut Street K ansas C ity, M o . 6 4 1 0 6 Phone: (81 6 ) 374 -2 4 8 1 3 5 3 5 M a rk e t Street P.O. B o x 1 3 3 0 9 Philadelphia, Pa. 19101 Phone: (215) 5 9 6 -1 1 5 4 Regjons IX and X * * Region IV 1371 Peachtree Street, N E . A tlanta, Ga. 3 0 3 0 9 Phone: (4 0 4 ) 5 2 6 -5 4 1 8 Region V I 4 5 0 G o ld e n G ate A ve n u e Box 36017 San Francisco, Calif. 9 4 1 0 2 Phone: * Regions VII and VIII are serviced by Kansas City ** Regions IX and X are serviced by San Francisco (415) 5 5 6 -4 6 7 8