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Union Democracy Review--> Articles Get all the union democracy news: SUBSCRIBE to Union Democracy Review! From the January-March 2004 issue of UDR #150 The RISE program: trying to discuss the future of Teamster Reform at a Cornell University Forum by Carl Biers In 1999 Teamster president
Jimmy Hoffa Jr hired Edwin Stier, a former federal prosecutor credited
with ridding NJ Teamster Local 560 of mob influence, to develop an internal
ethics program that would convince the Justice Department to end its oversight
of the union. Stier produced RISE (for
Respect, Integrity, Strength, and Ethics). He selected a committee of
officers and rank-and-file Teamsters to develop an ethics code, created
a complex enforcement system, recruited an advisory board of prominent
labor attorneys and professors, waged an aggressive public relations campaign
to promote the program, and published an 800-page report on Teamster corruption. Now, after five years, while
the Hoffa administration continues its campaign to end government oversight,
RISE is in limbo, its implementation stalled while the government's apparatus
remains in place. The public relations campaign, however, continues in
full force. Stier pronounced RISE to
be the most comprehensive internal self-reform effort by union or corporation
in U.S. history. Its goal, he explained, is to transform the culture of
the union into one where corruption is not tolerated. Reform imposed by
outside monitors, he argued, will not effect lasting change because it
will not alter the culture of the union. He posed a stark choice: perpetual
outside monitorship or the RISE program. Stier himself accomplished such
a cultural transformation, he said, in his 10 years as court-appointed
monitor over the notoriously mobbed-up Local 560 in NJ, and so it could
be accomplished in the entire IBT if only his RISE is adopted. AUD has followed Stier's
program closely, praising the comprehensive Code of Ethics, but expressing
deep skepticism about its enforcement mechanism which relies entirely
on the union's existing power structure, currently in the hands of officers
who have repeatedly failed to take action against corruption in the union.
So none of Stier's presentation was new to me. What struck me, though,
was how confidently he lauded the program even though it has never been
put to the test. When he finished his presentation,
I raised my hand. The issue, I said, is not a choice between perpetual
government monitorship or a self-reform program. At some point, the union
must be given a chance to go it alone. But, is now the right time? Hoffa openly proclaims his
top priority to be ending the government monitorship, yet his administration
has missed many an opportunity to show that it is serious about attacking
corruption, failing to take action in several cases involving wrongdoing
at high levels of the union. It has been the court-appointed Independent
Review Board which continues to police the union for corruption. If the
Teamsters, with its history of domination by organized crime, embezzlement,
repression of members' rights, beatings, murders - all the sordid crimes
that led to the RICO suit in the first place - is to be left to its own
self-monitoring, shouldn't it prove itself first before the government
steps out? Why not implement RISE now, show that it works, then ask the
government to leave? These were, I thought, good
points, substantive criticism that would spark an interesting discussion.
Stier's response was deeply
disturbing. He did not address the points I had made. Instead he launched
an attack on AUD. He charged that we have never said a single positive
thing about RISE, and judging by our criticisms, we have not even looked
at it. Our attacks are explained, he claimed, by our alliance with a faction
in the Teamsters (he did not say TDU, but everyone knew what he meant)
which he said is hoping for RISE to fail. I was taken aback. But I
shouldn't have been. Stier is, after all, a highly paid employee of the
Hoffa administration, a combination ethics czar and public relations agent
on a mission to end government oversight. He's also an attorney, a savvy
former prosecutor who knows that if you can't answer someone's question,
you can always question their motives. I was starting to get annoyed,
and not just at Stier, but at Cornell which, although its aim was to foster
discussion, ended up providing a one-sided platform for Stier to carry
out his public relations campaign. (When, before the talk, I distributed
a UDR article about Teamster Local 854, a local said by RISE to have been
democratized and freed of mob dominance but where the NLRB has issued
a stinging complaint against local officers for violently intimidating
insurgents, Carroll felt it necessary to disclaim Cornell's association
with the piece. He later told me it had offended some Teamster officials
who were present.) Here was Stier lauding his untested program as the
labor movement's greatest effort against corruption, without a word of
acknowledgement to the Teamster reformers, rank-and-filers and officers,
in and out of TDU, who have risked - some even given - their lives fighting
to rid the union of the mob. Later, in his concluding
remarks, Stier backtracked. Some compromise, he said, between the two
extremes of perpetual government oversight and self-monitoring is called
for at this point. I approached him afterwards, pointing out that the
program he had just plugged for an hour and a half, is the latter extreme.
His response: RISE is merely the union's "bargaining position"
with the government; he fully expects to compromise somewhere in between
the two. Articles on
RISE and Teamster reform: Previous Article: Leadership overturned in National Writers Union Next Article: Rebels, Reformers and Racketeers This website is made possible by contributions from union members and supporters like you. Please help us build the movement for union democracy, join or contribute to AUD. AUDHome; Legal Rights; Education; Union Democracy Review; Books; AUDLinks Page designed by Matt Noyes, National
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