Playing Against the House: The Dramatic World of an Undercover Union Organizer by James Walsh was a great book about union organizing at a casino, Mardi Gras, in Miami, Florida. I've driven past this casino, and all of the other ones listed, having grown up there, which made it feel a little more close to home. I learned about a lot of union details like card-check agreements, salting, and organizing. The book was a balanced account of Walsh's experience with the zealous union organizers and the dehumanizing upper management of casinos. The experience takes place around 2011 through 2015.
Walsh is a great writer and I think this book definitely beats Nickel and Dimed, which felt less real to me. As a salt, Walsh worked with the union and was separately hired by two casinos at different points, Calder and Mardi Gras. In these casino roles, he did his job and, on the side, began organizing towards a union through relationship building.
I don't have too much to say on this book, but I think unions are regaining power and I'll be curious to see if this will be a long term culture shift.
I'll leave it at a quote from Harriet, a Haitian woman who helped lead the union, after Mardi Gras executives suppressed justice for her job: "This is my job now," she said. 'Being poor is my job," (p252).
Miscellaneous:
"Housekeepers are more likely to suffer injuries on the job than coal miners by more than one percentage point," (p29).
When asked about a worker's credit when she doesn't pay the hospital bill, "she rolled her eyes...she didn't care. She wasn't planning on financing a new car or a home any time soon," (p107).
"In 2014, Florida was home to 115,000 workers who were not union members but were covered by union contracts," because of right-to-work laws (p116).
"Low wage jobs made up 22% of job losses during the recession but have accounted for 44 percent of job growth during the recovery," (p248).
Thanks to Daniel Powers for recommending this book!