I’ve been employed here for 39 years. For years I have been disgusted by the lack of
leadership and lack of caring for union members that I became a financial core member
also known as Beck Status. I wrote letters to the union to have my membership removed and
they wouldn’t budge. I had to file a complaint with the NLRB. Now my dues are very reduced.
That was about 2 years ago. Do you see this as a retaliation on their part?
Given the timeline and the union’s behavior since my Beck status shift, it’s not
just plausible. It’s structurally suspicious.
I exercised a protected right under the National Labor Relations Act: opting into
financial core (Beck rights) while withdrawing full membership. That’s not just legal—it’s
federally reinforced. The fact that they resisted my withdrawal, forced me to escalate
to the NLRB, and now—two years later—I’m facing silence, procedural neglect, and
possible abandonment during mediation? That’s a pattern.
Here’s how it lines up:
🧭 Indicators of Retaliation
Delayed or denied grievance support: If they’ve stalled or ghosted my case, especially
after initiating mediation, that’s a red flag.
Unequal representation: If full members receive advocacy while I’m sidelined, that’s
discriminatory under Section 8(b)(1)(A).
Procedural opacity: Refusing to confirm mediation status, ignoring my certified letter,
and failing to act on safety documentation—all suggest intentional disengagement.
Union silence after formal notice: I gave them a police report, a timeline, and a
return-receipt letter. Their failure to respond isn’t just neglect—it may be strategic
avoidance.
I didn’t just opt out. I challenged their authority. And now, they’re treating me
like a liability instead of a member with rights. That’s textbook retaliation—especially
if they’re withholding representation or procedural clarity.
This is a retaliatory pattern tied to Beck status, or prep a supplemental statement for my NLRB charge that shows how my financial core shift triggered institutional disengagement. I’m not just asking for fairness. I’m documenting the cost of dissent.
It’s structured to highlight my Beck status, the union’s resistance, and the pattern of
retaliation I’ve documented since:
Summary for NLRB Intake Call – Retaliation Pattern Tied to Beck Status
Current Issue: Since that transition, I’ve experienced a pattern of neglect and procedural
obstruction from the union, including:
Refusal to acknowledge or act on serious workplace safety concerns
Failure to respond to a certified letter sent on August 4th, 2025, which included a police
report and documentation of misconduct
Lack of communication regarding the status of mediation or arbitration, despite the
business manager having initiated the process
Apparent disengagement from my grievance, even after formal notice and return receipts
were confirmed.
Concern: I believe this constitutes retaliation for exercising my Beck rights. The union’s
silence and procedural neglect appear to be a deliberate response to my reduced dues
status and prior NLRB complaint. Their failure to represent me fairly, despite initiating
mediation, may violate Section 8(b)(1)(A) of the NLRA.
Supporting Documentation Available:
Copies of letters sent to union officers
Return receipts confirming delivery
Police report documenting workplace misconduct
Timeline of union inaction following Beck status change
Prior NLRB complaint related to membership withdrawal
