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OCR Page 1 of 2407-15
FILED
BY
Stul thake
MR.
HOPKINS
JAN A 1952
December 31, 1953
Dear Phil:
I want to commend you and the officers of the Steelworkers'
Union for your decision to continue work beyond the expiration of
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your contracts with the steel industry on December thirty-first.
The decision to keep the steel plants of the Nation in
full production until a special convention of the Union could be
held was a good and patriotic step. 1 I am sure the American people
applaud you for that decision. They will likewise heartily approve
your motives in bringing before a special convention of rank-and-
file delegates an issue of such crucial importance to them and to
their country. I understand that the convention will consider and
act upon your Government's request to stay at work while the labor
dispute in the steel industry is before the wage Stabilization Board,
I realize that a decision to continue work despite the
expiration of a contract is a major decision -- not one to be lightly
undertaken. Nevertheless, I believe the national interest requires
such a decision by your Union at the present time. The Nation
simply cannot afford a stoppage in steel production, even a stoppage
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of limited duration. The demands for steel are too pressing. The
mobilization program has lost none of its urgency. Losses in steel
production would have an immediate and crippling effect on mobili-
zation schedules.
Under these pressing circumstances, the clear obligation
of the Steelworkers' Union is to stay at work to maintain full pro-
duction while their dispute with the steel industry is before the
Wage Stabilization Board. The obligation of the steel companies is
to maintain normal work and production schedules and to lay the full
facts in the case before the Board. The obligation of both parties
is to maintain the status quo under their collective bargaining
agreements while the case is before the Board.
The machinery of the Wage Stabilization Board offers a
practical substitute for a test of economic strength. The Board
is made up of representatives of labor, management, and the public.
The Board will give the parties to the dispute the opportunity to
present facts and arguments relevant to the dispute. It will con-
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