Not having worked in your business, I don't have any serious problem with short term negotiations etc. so long as the employer is not required to pay overtime or take a loss because of union activities that could have been handled outside of business hours.
There is never any OT involved. Trust me, NONE OF US on either side want to be there. It is about the least enjoyable part of my job, to be honest with you.
BUT......at some point the union is going to have to get back to the business of dealing with unethical and unfair employer relations, which is why workers originally unionized, rather than sticking it to the employer for as much as it can get regardless of whether that is good for the business or not.
The vast majority of my Union Business on company time is initiated by the Company, rather than the Union. For example.... Last Tuesday I spent about two hours emailing, talking, on the phone and meeting with our Union Local VP and three different supervisors about an issue related to what work members of our group were supposed to be doing while on OT. This was initiated because the supervisors had forced two Union employees to do work that is not part of our responsibility while in on OT over the prior weekend. Likewise, last Friday I spent about 30-45 minutes running the appropriate list to fill the company's request for two individuals to work OT that evening.
THAT is the sort of stuff that makes up most of my "Union Business" that gets done on Company time. Not exactly "sticking it to the man" type stuff there, now is it?
Actually most of what we're involved in these days (at least at my company) is trying to get the Company to live up to the contractual obligations that they have already agreed to in writing.
Until that situation is turned around, I think unions will continue to be a factor for fewer and fewer workers until they are stripped of their power entirely. Public sector employees--those supported by the taxpayer--are the last mega group to undergo serious soul searching and overhaul.
Interestingly enough we have more and more groups in the company I work for that are trying to Unionize. Mostly because it has become exceptionally apparent that the company has no interest in the well-being of its employees and cares only about its profit margin.
Non union shops in private industry will continue to kick butt and whittle away at the profits of the union shops unless the unions wise up. The taxpayer can bail out General Motors and Chrysler only so many times.
And the taxpayer can be asked to make up the difference in growing state and federal deficits only so long before they turn en masse against the public sector unions and say enough.
I work in a regulated private industry. No government money but lots of government oversight. Mostly at the State level, but some at the Federal level as well. There's no way the Unions are going away in this line of business.