A Brief History of Local 1220
of the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers
By Will Kelley

On the twelfth of June, 1939,
the Chicago chapter of the
Associated Broadcast Technicians Units [ABTU] of the IBEW held its first
regular meeting. In Studio 10 of WBBM, the members-to-be were read a telegram
from David Tracy, President of the International Organization [I.O.] of the
IBEW (and soon to be Assistant Secretary of Labor), approving the
"participation of the IBEW radio men in the ABTU." Before this,
broadcast engineers and operators organized by the IBEW had been in an
"IT&R" group within the larger IBEW local, in this case local
134, but the International Organization had found that 'it took a radio man to
organize a radio man,' so the ABTU was established as a semi-autonomous
organization to facilitate the unionization of broadcast engineers.
The ABTU grew rapidly. First, of course, once the ABTU had the blessings of
the I.O., broadcast engineers currently in Local 134 were encouraged to
formally affiliate themselves with the new ABTU. More importantly, though, men
flocked to the union in 1939, 1940, and 1941. There was a certain prestige to
being a union man, since the ABTU set standards for its members, especially the
"First 'Phone", a first-class radio and telephone engineers license.
Local 1220 was systematic enough that in 1941 a "points" system was
adopted to fairly evaluate candidates for membership, with a
"passing" score. Those who hadn't yet met the criteria for membership
could, in the meantime, receive temporary "work permits" so that the
lack of a first class license would not unfairly bar them from employment. (The
entire system for judging applicants and granting work permits was dismantled
after the Taft-Hartley laws went into effect.)
In the interests of good relations with employers the local never insisted
on controlling the assignment of technicians to shops, and the local accepted as
members applicants who had been recruited by the companies. At the same time,
though, Local 1220 watched for openings in shops it represented. Whenever
possible the local directed engineers and operators to jobs as they came
available. Since many broadcast technicians in smaller shops expressed an
interest in moving up to the larger stations, and the local knew what was
available, the local directly helped its members with career advancement.
Unionization also brought better pay, more decent working conditions, and
some protection from unfair treatment by employers. Basic benefits that are now
taken for granted, such as overtime for work over 40 hours, overtime pay for
work over 5 consecutive days, a lunch hour in the middle of the work period,
recognition of a necessary travel time for travel to transmitters when the
employees are assigned to more than one site, regular vacation, and so forth,
each had to be fought for. For instance, some men were expected to travel long
distances to work at two different transmitters with no allowance for the
additional travel time required. Issues for negotiation also included vacation,
sick leave, pensions, and overtime pay for work on holidays such as Christmas
and New Year's Day. Into the 1950s one broadcaster was still trying to argue
that if Christmas fell on a Sunday the employer could just pay straight time if
the Sunday was part of the engineer's regular work week. The union had to file
a grievance to stop the broadcaster. It is no wonder, then, that the ABTU attracted
so many broadcast technicians.
The early days of the ABTU were also full of the excitement and heat of a
rapidly organizing industry: no sooner was the ABTU organized than it had to
deal with a lockout at WHIP in Hammond, Indiana. The management was dead set
against an organized shop and continued to operate with two non-union operators
in defiance of pickets; their names and home addresses were noted so everyone
could know who they were. The lockout dragged on, however, and eventually the
head of the Lake County [Ind.] Central Labor Union, together with a
representative of President Tracy, met with the management of the
Hammond-Calumet B.C. Co.; opposition vanished overnight. By the spring of 1940
there were 428 men in the midwest local of the ABTU, and it was expected that
membership could swell to as many as 900 after all the IBEW members in Chicago
had transferred to the ABTU.
There was, though, one moment of confusion in the very early days of the
ABTU. Apparently the existence of the ABTU predated its formal affiliation with
the IBEW; even afterwards for several years there was a separate ABTU Council
and a separate International Representative. At the time of the early meetings
there was some confusion as to just who was eligible to vote on offices, and
for a little while there was some confusion on just who was Business Manager.
The old Business Manager of the ABTU was not sure the elections were valid.
Eventually the confusion was straightened out, the local continued to organize
under a provisional set of by-laws and in May, 1940 requested a charter from
the IBEW. In 1941 the Chicago organization received its formal charter as
"Local 1220 of the A.B.T.U. of the I.B.E.W."
The years of the Second World War are rather interesting in that war came
less than a year after Local 1220 received its charter. On one hand, the
intervention of the War Labor Board, wage stabilization and no-strike rules
limited the activities of Local 1220 with respect to typical union activities.
On the other hand, though, the same rules provided employers with a loose
framework of expected wages and working conditions. In the meantime, radio
technicians continued to come to the union asking to be represented by the ABTU
of the IBEW.
Given the restrictions of the war, it is not surprising that a brief period
of intense labor activity struck the broadcasters of the Midwest along with the
rest of the nation once that war was over. The interesting thing about Local
1220 though is just how brief the quarrel was. In July 1945 there was
discussion of strikes at eight stations, with only the provision that
"WCFL be permitted to operate for three days . . . if the union is
permitted adequate time on the air to present its side of the controversy.
Motion defeated 34 to 13." Instead the local decided to give all eight
stations three days warning. By the next monthly meeting, however, everything
seems to have been resolved to the satisfaction of the union.
By late 1947, though, the relative power of Local 1220 had begun to change.
Suddenly the contract negotiations became difficult, and attorneys for the
stations began to ask for extensions in order to examine the provisions of the
Taft-Hartley laws. In the early 1950s one finds that suddenly some companies
begin to refuse to negotiate and try to find ways to forestall the recognition
of the union even after employees have asked to be represented. Organizing
became more difficult.
As Local 1220 began to adjust to its new position under the Taft-Hartley
laws, though, an unprecedented hiring boom was underway: television had come to
town as a going commercial enterprise. First there was WBKB [later bought by
CBS to become WBBM-TV] and soon thereafter WGN-TV went on the air. Dozens of
engineers could be hired by a broadcaster in a single year. Most of the new
employees up to 1950-51 were men who had gained their training during the war.
The period from 1950 to roughly 1967 was a fairly quiet one, in that Local 1220
had settled into a routine for handling negotiations and grievances. There was
a year-long strike at WXFM near Harlem Avenue, one which broke out only shortly
after Norm Rugen had been complemented for his work on the transmitter, but
this was unusual. Behind the smooth surface, though, there was activity that
let the radio and television broadcast engineers keep the union together in the
long run. From the beginning, the local has shown a keen foresight into the
technical developments in broadcasting, and acting on this foresight has
permitted the broadcast engineers and operators to remain united.
Everyone who works with television, for instance, owes their IBEW
affiliation to the vision of the early members of the IBEW. As early as the
spring of 1940 the minutes of the monthly meeting note that there was
considerable discussion of the importance of jurisdiction over commercial
television. Zenith, of course, already had an experimental station in Chicago,
so it may be that this is what the members of the ABTU were watching, since the
minutes note in particular that the ABTU members at CBS-New York were the
principal obstacles to gaining jurisdiction to commercial television. The
question was whether IBEW or IATSE, the stage hands' union, would obtain jurisdiction.
Ultimately the matter was resolved in 1944, after the reports of several
committees on television education and FM education, when Petrillo of the
Musician's union agreed to back IBEW in jurisdiction over television in
exchange for IBEW giving the musicians jurisdiction over the playing of records
at radio stations. (The use of live musicians was decreasing as stations
switched to canned music, and this seemed to be a logical extension of the
function of musicians.) Although the leadership of the IBEW radio broadcast
engineers thought this to be a good deal, the regular memberships of Local 1220
heartily disapproved of the proposed agreement until the very month that IATSE
formally claimed jurisdiction over television. Opposition to the deal immediately
evaporated.
Similarly, everyone who works with videotape owes their place to a
twelve-day strike against CBS in 1958, a strike that also seems to be the
product of foresight on the part of the Radio and Television Broadcast
Engineers. In 1953 H. Walter Thompson, the president of Local 1220, toured the
Ampex plant to see what progress they were making in their experiments with
videotape. By 1958 videotape was no longer over the horizon but at the
doorstep, and IBEW requested that CBS grant jurisdiction over videotape to the
union. CBS refused, and the union walked. Most newspapers reported the strike
from the perspective of the company, which cried that the union simply was
gouging the company for more money, but one woman working for the Chicago American
went down to talk to the picketers and came back with the report that the
pickets said they didn't care if they didn't make a dime on the deal: they
wanted jurisdiction over videotape. Many of the technicians working with live
television were afraid they would be forced out once videotape was in extensive
use, and they wanted to be able to expand into a new area for employment. It
is, of course, difficult to say for sure what the basis of the strike was,
since the Chicago Tribune, Sun- Times, and Wall Street Journal mainly covered
the story as a matter of how well the stations were getting along without their
engineers, but it should be noted that the strike began on April 7 and
continued without progress until, on April 17th [as reported in one sentence in
the New York Times], CBS announced that there was no jurisdictional issue since
as far as CBS was concerned the IBEW had jurisdiction over all videotape. On
April 18th new contracts were in the hands of all the locals affected, a vote
was arranged, and on the 19th of April the strike was over.
The period from 1968 to 1970 was an odd one, in that there was a sudden
surge of new hires and therefore new members of Local 1220, but at the same
time the companies began a new period of squabbling with the local. There were
suddenly innumerable petty disputes arising from the companies trying to
unilaterally change jurisdiction without changing the contract first. Then, in
1971, the engineers at KWGN in Denver were hit by an ultimatum from the
management, demanding an open shop. The result was a lockout in Denver, pickets
in Chicago, and a deeply divided shop. Contract negotiations with WGN were
unusually difficult. Then, in 1972, CBS requested a nearly complete surrender
of jurisdiction. Again Local 1220 was forced to go out on strike, this time for
an extended period.
The mid-1970s saw another difficult change for Local 1220 as more and more
radio stations decided they no longer needed engineers. Instead of having
formats that required engineers, a large number of stations decided to go
"combo", meaning that the disc jockeys would take over almost all the
responsibilities of the engineers; as a classical station went to "Soft
Rock", for example, the simultaneous switch to a combo operation could cut
a ten-person staff down to three.
Not only did more broadcasters go combo, television stations cut back on the
amount of local production, making for more cutbacks in the staff. Finally, the
broadcasters began to hire fewer and fewer full-time employees, relying more
heavily on temporary personnel and "per diems" who do not accrue
seniority and have no benefits.
In all, then, the last fifteen to twenty years have been a challenge to
Local 1220. At this time, though, the members of the local can look back with
pride on the record of successes that the union has compiled. The union has a
record of vision in acting so as to secure for its members the best possible
working conditions for its members, and the best possible wages, while never
risking the security and well-being of its members unnecessarily. The union
only goes to war when it is pushed and its members would be hurt, but when it
has to look out for its members, it is effective.
Compiled by Will Kelley, on the 50th
Anniversary of Local 1220
Return to Home
Page of IBEW Local 1220