Our History

Akron, Ohio -- We come from the 60-year-old United Rubber, Cork,
Linoleum Plastic Workers of America, founded September 12, 1935, in Akron --
then the "Rubber Capital of the World" and former home base for most of the major tire and rubber
companies.
The union's founding was preceded by 30 years of struggle to organize. The "sit-down"
strike was born among rubber workers as Rex Murray, later a charter member of the URW and then president of the
General Tire local in Akron, led the first "sit-down" in June 1934.
Among the struggles of those days was the 1936 Goodyear strike, which saw 11 miles of
picket lines around Akron. CIO President John L. Lewis of the Mine Workers rallied support for the rubber
workers.
Violence against activists was common. URW founding President Sherman Dalrymple
was beaten by company goons in Alabama.
But the numbers were increasing from the initial 3,050 founding members, and by
the end of 1935 the URW had chartered 39 local unions. The first local in Canada was chartered in 1936 -- Local 67
in Kitchener, Ont
Despite the Depression, morale and loyalty ran high, and by the late 1930s
membership grew to more than 100,000. It continued to grow during World War II to nearly 190,000 in 222 locals by
1945 and to nearly 209,000 by June 1947.
In its 10th year --1945, the URW expanded its jurisdiction to cork, linoleum and
plastics workers. In that year also, L.S. Buckmaster was elected president to lead the union during the national
conversion to peacetime industry.
Traditionally, bargaining in the rubber industry had been on an individual plant
basis. Working toward companywide bargaining, the union succeeded in 1946 in negotiating a general wage increase
with the "Big Four" Goodyear, U.S. Rubber, Firestone and Goodrich -- in one set of negotiations. The first
companywide agreement came in 1947, when a "master agreement" with U.S. Rubber was applied uniformly to 19 company
plants. By 1948, all the major companies had "master agreements."
In 1949, the union established its first Fair Practices Department aimed at
stamping out injustices based on race, sex, color, religion or national origin. Also in 1949, the URW began to
demand better pensions, and when Goodrich agreed to improve its contributory plan, the stage was set for
achievement of union-negotiated non-contributory pensions and insurance plans in the Big Four.
In 1960, George Burdon, the union's organizing director, was elected international
president. Peter Bommarito, president of Local 101 in Detroit, was elected vice president, and Ike Gold, of
Firestone Local 7, was elected secretary-treasurer.
Bommarito was elected president in 1966 and served until 1981, becoming a legend
in the union as a fighting leader. The year after his election, the URW confronted what Bommarito called an "unholy
alliance" -- a mutual assistance pact among what had become the "Big Five" with the rise of Uniroyal. Bommarito led
52,000 men and women onto picket lines at the Big Five and 23 independent companies, as the union won major wage
increases and benefit improvements.
Another of Bommarito's achievements was the establishment of a Joint Occupational
Health Agreement as the URW became the first union to employ a full-time industrial hygienist, Louis S. Beliczky,
in 1971.
In 1974, URW Canadian locals won cost-of-living adjustments after a lengthy
strike, paving the way for U.S. locals to win similar inflation protection in 1976, with an 140-day strike at
Firestone, Uniroyal, Goodrich and Goodyear.
In 1981, Milan "Mike" Stone became the URW's fifth president and led the union
through the anti-labor 1980s Against threats of losing COLA, the URW held its own. And in 1984, the union led the
way toward health care cost containment reaching an agreement with Uniroyal months before 1985 contract talks were
scheduled. Similar cost containment language with protection of benefits was then negotiated with Goodrich,
Goodyear and Firestone.
Kenneth L. Coss was elected president in 1990 and led successful negotiations in
1991 with Bridgestone/Firestone, setting a pattern for the other companies. Building on an effort begun by Stone,
the union won recognition at Bridgestone's new plant in Warren County, Tenn., based on a card check. This
uncontentious recognition of URW Local 1155 certainly did not foretell the "War of '94" that Bridgestone was soon
to launch against the URW and American workers.
Under Coss' direction, the URW made significant efforts to improve education
programs and communications activities, and to strengthen labor-management cooperation. Recognizing the
overwhelming challenges facing the URW and other industrial unions, Coss along with his union leadership, led the
union toward the merger with the United Steelworkers. With that merger, the URW and the entire labor movement in
North America have a new beginning. Today, the USW Rubber/Plastic Industry Conference is led by Stan Johnson,
appointed September 1, 2009 as the Executive Vice President of the Conference.
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