PERSONAL SPENDING
When you pay union dues, where does your money go?
Unions say they only spend money in ways that benefit the union members.
For example, in a letter to Delta flight attendants the International Assocation of Machinists is trying to unionize, Stephen Gordon, a District President of the union, said,
"IAM dues are spent for the benefit of IAM members."
To see the entire letter, click here.
You can see the financial reports unions file each year with the Department of Labor.
Click here to go to the Department of Labor web site. Use the drop-down menu for the box labeled "Union name by abbreviation" to find the union you're interested in, and use the drop-down menu in the "union type" box to select "intermediate," "international" or "local" depending on which level you want to explore. Then click "submit" at the bottom of the page.
But union financial reports show that union officials spend money mostly to benefit themselves.
For example, here is what was reported in 2014 (the most recent year available) by each of the 3 levels of the International Association of Machinists organization:


Presidents of the International Unions decide who the union hires and how much they're paid. Here's what union constitutions say:
- International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers: "The International President has the power to employ such assistants as, in his judgment, are necessary to carry on the work of the organization, and to decide the compensation to be paid."
- Utility Workers Union of America: "The National President shall have the authority to appoint, direct, suspend or remove any Regional Director, National Representative, Organizer or other employee of the National Union . . . He/she shall fix their compensation..."
- United Steelworkers union: "The International President shall have the authority to appoint, direct, suspend or remove such organizers, representatives, agents and employees as the President may deem necessary. The President shall fix their compensation..."
Do other unions spend their money the way the Machinists union does?
Of course. Here are two more examples of International Unions' spending (keep in mind, these unions also have district and local unions that spend workers' money):
THE BOTTOM LINE:
Without a union, YOU decide how YOU want to spend $60.00 each month, and $720.00 a year can pay for a lot of your basic life needs.
Or, if you invest that money, it can make you a lot more money.
Or, you can just give it to a union.