ATLANTA — In a move that contradicts the South’s non-union history, about 1,400 workers at Blue Bird Corp.’s Fort Valley school bus manufacturing plant have voted to join the United Steelworkers Union (USW).
“We’re proud that Blue Bird workers chose to join our union,” United Steelworkers International President Tom Conway said following Friday’s vote. “We’re ready to help them bargain a fair contract that accounts for their contributions to the company’s success.”
The recent Blue Bird union organizing effort was one of the most significant in the South, a region marked by state right-to-work laws that neither require workers to join a union or pay union dues as a condition of employment.
President Joe Biden issued a statement congratulating the Blue Bird workers for voting to unionize.
“The middle class built America. And unions built the middle class,” Biden said. “The workers at Blue Bird, and at companies like it all over the country, are proving the future can and will be built in America. And union workers will be a big part of that future.”
Blue Bird is an active participant in America’s move toward clean energy, manufacturing both low-emission and zero-emission school buses. The company has been approved to receive significant funding through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean School Bus program.
Thanks to Friday’s vote, Blue Bird workers will have a seat at the bargaining table, USW District 9 Director Dan Flippo said.
“For…
Read the full article here