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- Dec 9, 2009
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i know how the game is played with you...i will ignore your source as you ignore mine....perhaps if you actually read my post, you would have noticed something.
You apparently know very little since the Bureau of Labor Statistics is the keeper and authority on labor including employment in this country. Interesting how BLS data is acceptable during the Clinton Administration when the numbers were good but not now. Don't blame you from ignoring them.
Highlights from the 2010 data:
--The union membership rate for public sector workers (36.2 percent) was
substantially higher than the rate for private sector workers (6.9 percent).
(See table 3.)
--Workers in education, training, and library occupations had the highest
unionization rate at 37.1 percent. (See table 3.)
--Black workers were more likely to be union members than were white, Asian,
or Hispanic workers. (See table 1.)
--Among states, New York had the highest union membership rate (24.2 percent)
and North Carolina had the lowest rate (3.2 percent). (See table 5.)