The Dramatic World of an Undercover Union Organizer
by James D. Walsh
Scribner
Hardcover
From the publisher's website:
Fascinating and groundbreaking: a talented young journalist goes
undercover to work as a casino labor-union organizer in Florida in this
rare, smart look at the ongoing struggle between the haves and the
have-nots.
Salting is a simple concept—get hired at a non-union
company, do the job you were hired to do, and, with the help of
organizers on the outside, unionize your coworkers from the inside.
James Walsh spent almost three years as a “salt” in two casinos in South
Florida, working as a buffet server and a bartender. Neither his
employers at the casinos nor the union knew about Walsh’s intentions to
write about his experience. Now he reveals little-known truths about how
unions fight to organize workers in the service industries, the
vigorous corporate opposition against them, and how workers are caught
in the battle.
During his time as an undercover worker, Walsh
witnessed the oddities of casino culture, the cultish nature of labor
organizing, and surprising details of service industry employment. His
revelations show the ferocious conflict between large service
corporations and their hourly wage employees, who are hanging onto
economic survival by their fingernails.
The hotel and service
union Walsh worked with employs young, college-educated activists and
learning how salts use their skills to great success or failure is
riveting. Walsh transports us directly to the hot, humid backroom of the
Miami casino and shows how it feels to be grilled by a union organizer
as to whether you have enough grit for the job. A clear-eyed and
fascinating portrait of labor-organizing, Playing Against the House
explores the trials of day-to-day life for the working poor to its
effects on the middle class and the face of twenty-first century union
busting in unprecedented detail.
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