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1983 Arizona copper mine strike

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increased the anger of the strikers, who now faced permanent loss of their jobs. The company offered new workers virtually the same deal it had offered the unions, which had turned them down. Instead of an annual cost of living raise pegged to inflation, Phelps Dodge offered an annual wage review pinned to the price of copper. If copper increased, employees would receive a raise. It offered new workers $ 7.00 an hour instead of over $ 9.00. Instead of offering free doctor visits in the company hospital, they began to require a $ 5.00 copayment. The union leaders turned that down, but hundreds of workers from Tucson and Phoenix accepted it. Eventually, many of the union workers went back to work as well.
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no U. S. producer can continue operating for very long when its cost of producing a pound of copper approaches or exceeds the price for which it can be sold. Munroe also pointed out that Arizona miners wages had risen at an annual rate of nearly 15 percent during the 1970s, while the average U. S. manufacturing employee had seen only a 10 percent increase. "The same eight dollars that Phelps Dodge pays for forty minutes of work", Munroe went on to say, "would buy more than a full shift of work from the average mining employee at a large South American copper company." Many of the unions in other industries had already agreed to pay cuts. Munroe said that the copper industry could be no exception.
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unions believed that to give in to Phelps Dodge would destroy the system of uniform wages in the copper industry, which had served them so well for years. Heading the union bargaining team was Frank S. McKee, a veteran negotiator who had risen in the union from working the furnaces at Bethlehem Steel. McKee was preparing to run for the presidency of the United Steelworkers, and did not want to be perceived as weak. At the same time, the unions were also negotiating with Magma Copper and ASARCO. In June, both Magma and ASARCO agreed to contracts on the pattern set by Kennecott, which left Phelps Dodge the only holdout. The two sides could not agree on
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steel rebar, baseball bats, and two-by-fours. A bullet fired into the home of a strikebreaker in Ajo lodged in the brain of his sleeping two-year-old daughter. An automobile caravan of more than 100 cars wound through Clifton and threw rocks through the windows of strikebreakers' homes. At the same time, strikers and their supporters claimed that acts of violence by strikebreakers often were not prosecuted by authorities or reported in the media. In August, miners were subject to undercover
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Phelps Dodge managers walked out the gate and onto the middle of US Highway 191 (all traffic had been rerouted). Down the empty highway walked two union representatives to meet them. A state police official joined the group to mediate. The union men told Phelps Dodge that they had no control over the crowd and that the crowd was planning to storm the mine and plant unless the company shut down operations by the 3 pm shift change. The company men agreed to shut down.
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entering and leaving the plants. Picketers with bullhorns identified picket-line crossers by name. People spread roofing nails on roads going into the plants. Phelps Dodge succeeded in obtaining court orders limiting the number of picket, but generally did not succeed in getting them enforced. The Greenlee County Board of Supervisors imposed a 9 pm to 6 am curfew, but the Clifton City Council instructed its police not to enforce it.
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worst record in labor relations of any company that has ever operated in Arizona.” However he was also frustrated by what he considered the intransigence of the national union leaders. On August 15, despite a request from Governor Babbitt to hold off, Phelps Dodge mailed eviction notices to miners fired for misconduct on the picket line.
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by often using the down time to perform needed maintenance. Copper mining companies did not want to incur the anger and the violence that they knew would happen if they maintained copper production during a strike. Some business analysts considered Phelps Dodge actions to be risky or foolish. A July 1983 cover of
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In September 1984, the new workforce began voting in elections to decide whether or not to decertify the unions. The result was the largest mass decertification in US history: 35 locals of 13 different unions representing Phelps Dodge workers were decertified in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. After
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Although negotiations between the company and the unions continued for the rest of 1983, and union picketing continued for several years, the strike had effectively been lost. The National Guard withdrew at the end of August. On several occasions, strikers blocked the highway from Safford to Morenci
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However, the situation turned rapidly against the strikers. Although there had been no fatalities during the strike, the threats of violence increased the political pressure on Democratic governor Babbitt to intervene. Babbitt was no fan of Phelps Dodge and said, “In my opinion, Phelps Dodge has the
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The Phelps Dodge plants were kept running by plant supervisors and by office personnel, some brought in from the New York headquarters. They worked 12-hour shifts with some union workers who ignored the strike, about 700 according to the company. As expected, angry picketers shouted insults at those
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decided to hold a series of "town hall meetings" to talk directly to the workers. "The copper you produce here," he told the miners, had to compete with copper produced in Canada, South America, Africa, Asia, Europe, and Australia. Essentially the price for copper is the same all over the world. And
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Union representatives had stayed out of the assembled crowd to avoid making the unions liable for any violent actions, but they requested an urgent meeting with company management inside the plant. In a scene that writer Jonathan Rosenblum likened to an Old West showdown, as both sides watched, two
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However, then Phelps Dodge did exactly what it had announced it would do, but almost everyone had thought it was empty bravado. The company continued to produce copper during the strike for the first time since 1959. Since then, the company, like other copper companies, had shut down during strikes
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Phelps Dodge lost money in 1982, which added to its debt burden. Other copper companies were then owned by large oil companies (Anaconda was owned by Atlantic Richfield, Cypress by Standard of Indiana, and Kennecott by Standard of Ohio) and could sustain losses, but Phelps Dodge was by itself. With
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In 1981, the price of copper plummeted from a high of $ 1.40 in February to $ .75 (seventy-five cents) per pound by December 18, resulting in losses for the entire copper industry. In 1981, the copper industry as a whole laid off approximately 50% (or 11,000) of its workers statewide. Phelps Dodge
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Shortly after the strike had ended, world copper prices began to climb. That and the introduction of new mining technology led to a marked increase in profits at Phelps Dodge. While their annual profits in 1985 were just $ 29.5 million, profits rapidly climbed to $ 205.7 million in 1987 and $ 420
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Under heavy military and police protection, the Morenci mine and plant reopened on August 20 without incident, and the company again began hiring replacement workers. About 35 percent of the original work force returned. Entering workers were still subjected to obscene gestures, name calling, and
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However, the next day, August 9, a crowd of 100 gathered outside the gates of the Morenci mine and plant. Many in the crowd carried chains and baseball bats, and guns could be seen in many of their cars. Arizona state police officers told Phelps Dodge managers that an attack appeared imminent and
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The Phelps Dodge managers at Morenci quickly typed up an announcement that the Morenci mine and plant would immediately shut down for a 10-day cooling off period. Union leaders read the announcement to the crowd 30 minutes before the deadline, and violence was averted. The plant shut down, and a
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Strikebreakers, the workers who continued working during the strike, received threatening phone calls, and car windows and windows in their homes were smashed. Company-owned railroad bridges were set afire. At the El Paso smelter, a group of strikers incapacitated a police dog by beating it with
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In April 1983, Phelps Dodge began negotiating with a coalition of its 13 labor unions, led by the United Steel Workers. Phelps Dodge insisted that it required elimination of cost-of-living adjustment, a freeze in wages, worker copayments for health care, and a lower wage scale for new hires. The
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and Phoenix newspapers and advertised that the average annual wage for its employees was $ 26,200, plus what it calculated as $ 10,500 in benefits. Many people considered that an attractive wage, which had an effect in curbing sympathy for the strikers. However, the advertisements also greatly
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In April 1983, rival copper producer Kennecott and its unions agreed on a contract that froze base pay for three years. The union leadership considered that it had accommodated the suffering copper industry by agreeing to no wage increases for three years, except for the usual cost-of-living
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On August 17, despite his dislike of Phelps Dodge, Babbitt decided that he had a duty to prevent violence when the mines and mills reopened. He sent 325 National Guard soldiers to Morenci, and increased the number of state policemen there to 425. The action drew bitter criticism from union
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and New Mexico on January 3, 1982, and place the rest of the workers on a four-day work week in order to minimize the impact of the layoffs. In doing so, unlike the rest of the copper industry, Phelps Dodge continued to operate and pay its workers and reduce its production by 20%.
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no expectation of higher copper prices for years to come, management concluded that to survive, Phelps Dodge needed a long-term plan to reduce labor costs. To accomplish that, it determined to eliminate the cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) from the upcoming union contract.
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Although copper prices remained stagnant throughout 1982, Phelps Dodge ended its shutdown, calling more than half the work force back about five months after Munroe's visits. All of the other copper companies continued their shutdowns.
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that had obtained for years in the industry, but Phelps Dodge decided not to follow the Kennecott agreement. It also decided and announced publicly that it could not afford to do so and would not shut down for a strike.
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and Arizona, because of its losses. Phelps Dodge laid off workers, and a total of approximately 12,000 copper workers had been laid off across the industry. None of the copper mines in Arizona continued to operate.
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Phelps Dodge announced salary cuts to management personnel and laid off 100 salaried employees. On April 7, 1982, Phelps Dodge announced it would lay off all 3,400 of its hourly workers in
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published a front-page story describing how Phelps Dodge restructured and avoided bankruptcy. The Arizona copper mine strike would later become a symbol of defeat for American unions.
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lasted nearly three years and resulted in the replacement of most of the striking workers and decertification of the unions. It is regarded as an important event in the history of the
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threats of violence, but strikers at the gate could not prevent the replacement workers from entering the mine. Eight days later, 10 strikers were arrested in Ajo and charged with
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continued to operate with full manpower throughout most of 1981, although it continued to lose money. In December 1981, Phelps Dodge announced that it would lay off 108 workers in
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singled out the Arizona strike as the start of overt company strikebreaking in the 1980s. Journalists referred to the miners' strike as a precedent for subsequent labor failures.
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flew to Morenci and got Phelps Dodge to agree on a ten-day freeze on hiring replacement workers. Babbitt flew back to Phoenix believing that he had averted violence.
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supporters, who accused Babbitt of being in the “back pocket” of Phelps Dodge. He responded that he was “in the back pocket of the American judicial system.”
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Negotiations between Phelps Dodge and the unions failed to reach an agreement, and a strike began on midnight of July 30, including workers from
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adjustments. It expected that the new Kennecott agreement would be quickly duplicated with all the other copper producers, the same system of
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by the Arizona Criminal Intelligence Systems Agency to identify the strikers engaged in violence. Meanwhile, the local government passed
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caravan of 150 cars drove out the gates through the jeering crowd. It seemed to some strikers that they had won a great union victory.
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to prevent workers from reporting for work. The National Guard returned briefly in May 1984 after another outbreak of violence.
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Kingsolver, Barbara. Holding the Line: Women in the Great Arizona Mine Strike of 1983. Ithaca, N.Y.: ILR Press, 1989.
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was formed at the Morenci Mine. The next day, Phelps Dodge increased security personnel in and around the mine.
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a series of confrontations and controversies, the strike officially ended on February 19, 1986, when the
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Tensions grew as Phelps Dodge prepared to bring in permanent replacements. On August 8, Arizona Governor
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Copper Crucible: How the Arizona Miner's Strike of 1983 Recast Labor-Management Relations in America.
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Copper Crucible: How the Arizona Miners' Strike of 1983 Recast Labor-Management Relations in America
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Swasy, A., Long road back: How Phelps Dodge struggled to survive and prospered again,
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Vision & Enterprise: Exploring the History of Phelps Dodge Corporation
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Union Busting: How Arizona's 'CIA' Helped Phelps Dodge Destroy The Unions
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On August 5, Phelps Dodge announced it they would begin hiring permanent
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rejected appeals from the unions attempting to halt decertification.
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that they would not be able to protect the plant or those inside it.
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Copper Crucible: how the Arizona miner's strike of 1983 recast labor
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Copper Crucible: how the Arizona miners' strike of 1983 recast labor
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Copper Crucible: how the Arizona Miners Strike of 1983 Recast Labor
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Holding the Line: Women in the Great Arizona Mine Strike of 1983.
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Labor dispute between Phelps Dodge and the United Steel Workers
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limiting both picketing and demonstrations at the mine.
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The Transformation of American Industrial Relations
500:(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1998) 95. 553:“Troops called out after copper strike violence” 673: 209:declared a "Management Crisis at Phelps Dodge." 195:, Arizona. Thousands of miners walked out and a 415:Book On 1983 Copper Strike Draws Wrong Lessons 727:Labor disputes led by the United Steelworkers 228: 523:“Violence feared in strike-torn mining town” 697:Miners' labor disputes in the United States 397: 395: 393: 391: 389: 387: 385: 487:, Jonathan Rosenblum, June 29-July 5, 1995 432: 382: 152: 346:, Ithaca, N.Y.: ILR Press, 1995, p.217. 14: 674: 88:began as a labour dispute between the 268: 555:, Lodi CA News-Sentinel, 7 May 1984. 687:History of Greenlee County, Arizona 24: 566:“Keeping people from being killed” 293: 33:Arizona Copper Mine Strike of 1983 25: 18:Arizona copper mine strike of 1983 738: 659: 647: 635: 682:1983 labor disputes and strikes 588: 571: 558: 545: 532: 516: 503: 490: 86:1983 Arizona copper mine strike 622:Ithaca, N.Y.: ILR Press, 1995. 615:Ithaca, N.Y.: ILR Press, 1989. 472: 426: 408: 370: 361: 349: 336: 320:The Economics of Labor Markets 301:National Labor Relations Board 13: 1: 329: 171:(COLA) and job combinations. 114: 99:and mill workers, led by the 49:- February 19, 1986 306: 109:United States labor movement 7: 444:University of Arizona Press 423:, Dan Fein, August 21, 1995 10: 743: 605: 379:, by Jonathan D Rosenblaum 312:million in 1988. In 1989, 229:Hiring replacement workers 169:cost-of-living adjustments 692:Labor disputes in Arizona 174: 65: 60: 37: 32: 702:Greenlee County, Arizona 90:Phelps Dodge Corporation 596:The Wall Street Journal 496:Jonathan D. Rosenblum, 342:Rosenblum, Jonathan D. 315:The Wall Street Journal 41:June 30, 1983 509:Jonathan D Rosenblum, 618:Rosenblum, Jonathan. 611:Kingsolver, Barbara. 153:Contract negotiations 401:Carlos A Schwantes, 598:, November 24, 1989 442:. Tucson, Arizona: 434:Sheridan, Thomas E. 358:, December 18, 1981 356:Kingman Daily Miner 235:replacement workers 101:United Steelworkers 583:The New York Times 527:The New York Times 439:Arizona: A History 269:State intervention 160:pattern bargaining 707:Mining in Arizona 564:Joseph M. Baily, 538:Arthur Rotstein, 136:Company chairman 103:. The subsequent 82: 81: 78: 77: 16:(Redirected from 734: 722:Douglas, Arizona 664: 663: 652: 651: 640: 639: 638: 631: 599: 592: 586: 577:William Serrin, 575: 569: 562: 556: 549: 543: 536: 530: 529:, 19 August 1983 520: 514: 507: 501: 494: 488: 476: 470: 467: 458: 457: 430: 424: 412: 406: 399: 380: 374: 368: 365: 359: 353: 347: 340: 138:George B. Munroe 67: 66: 56: 54: 48: 46: 30: 29: 21: 742: 741: 737: 736: 735: 733: 732: 731: 717:1983 in Arizona 672: 671: 670: 666:Organized labor 658: 646: 636: 634: 626: 608: 603: 602: 593: 589: 585:, 30 July 1984. 576: 572: 563: 559: 550: 546: 537: 533: 521: 517: 511:Copper Crucible 508: 504: 495: 491: 477: 473: 468: 461: 454: 446:. p. 343. 431: 427: 413: 409: 400: 383: 375: 371: 366: 362: 354: 350: 341: 337: 332: 309: 296: 294:Decertification 271: 231: 177: 155: 117: 92:and a group of 72: 52: 50: 44: 42: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 740: 730: 729: 724: 719: 714: 709: 704: 699: 694: 689: 684: 669: 668: 656: 644: 624: 623: 616: 607: 604: 601: 600: 587: 570: 557: 544: 531: 515: 502: 489: 471: 459: 452: 425: 407: 381: 369: 360: 348: 334: 333: 331: 328: 308: 305: 295: 292: 270: 267: 230: 227: 176: 173: 154: 151: 116: 113: 80: 79: 76: 75: 73: 70: 63: 62: 58: 57: 39: 35: 34: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 739: 728: 725: 723: 720: 718: 715: 713: 710: 708: 705: 703: 700: 698: 695: 693: 690: 688: 685: 683: 680: 679: 677: 667: 662: 657: 655: 650: 645: 643: 633: 632: 629: 621: 617: 614: 610: 609: 597: 591: 584: 580: 574: 567: 561: 554: 548: 541: 535: 528: 524: 519: 512: 506: 499: 493: 486: 485: 484:Tucson Weekly 480: 475: 466: 464: 455: 453:0-8165-1515-8 449: 445: 441: 440: 435: 429: 422: 421: 416: 411: 404: 398: 396: 394: 392: 390: 388: 386: 378: 373: 364: 357: 352: 345: 339: 335: 327: 325: 321: 317: 316: 304: 302: 291: 287: 285: 279: 275: 266: 262: 258: 254: 252: 251:Bruce Babbitt 247: 244: 240: 236: 226: 224: 220: 214: 210: 208: 207: 206:Business Week 200: 198: 194: 190: 186: 182: 172: 170: 164: 161: 150: 146: 142: 139: 134: 131: 126: 123: 112: 110: 106: 102: 98: 97:copper miners 95: 91: 87: 74: 69: 68: 64: 59: 40: 36: 31: 19: 712:Phelps Dodge 619: 612: 595: 590: 582: 573: 560: 547: 534: 526: 518: 505: 492: 482: 474: 438: 428: 420:The Militant 418: 410: 402: 376: 372: 363: 355: 351: 343: 338: 323: 319: 313: 310: 297: 288: 280: 276: 272: 263: 259: 255: 248: 239:Morenci Mine 232: 219:surveillance 215: 211: 204: 201: 178: 165: 156: 147: 143: 135: 127: 118: 85: 83: 223:injunctions 197:picket line 676:Categories 330:References 115:Background 53:1986-02-19 45:1983-06-30 307:Aftermath 654:Business 436:(1995). 237:for the 642:Arizona 628:Portals 606:Sources 284:rioting 193:Douglas 189:Clifton 181:Morenci 122:Arizona 51: ( 43: ( 450:  243:Tucson 191:, and 175:Strike 105:strike 71:+2,000 61:Number 551:UPI, 130:Texas 94:union 448:ISBN 322:and 84:The 38:Date 185:Ajo 678:: 581:, 525:, 481:, 462:^ 417:, 384:^ 187:, 183:, 111:. 630:: 456:. 55:) 47:) 20:)

Index

Arizona copper mine strike of 1983
Phelps Dodge Corporation
union
copper miners
United Steelworkers
strike
United States labor movement
Arizona
Texas
George B. Munroe
pattern bargaining
cost-of-living adjustments
Morenci
Ajo
Clifton
Douglas
picket line
Business Week
surveillance
injunctions
replacement workers
Morenci Mine
Tucson
Bruce Babbitt
rioting
National Labor Relations Board
The Wall Street Journal


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