
Through the years there have been many significant
comments passed on the exemplary relationship
existing between NECA and the IBEW,
pertaining to the merits and accomplishments of
our Council on Industrial Relations. Here are a
few selected at random:
L.K Comstock, NECA
Co-Founder of the CIR:
“To my mind, the best and by far the easiest
field in which NECA and the IBEW can
achieve their goals, is through the Council.
Here, if we will, we can jointly proceed with
policies of wide significance– not timorously
as if we were afraid of the future—but
rather as leaders of the type of labor-man-agement
most suited to the age which is
now dawning. If we indeed achieve cooperation
in such spirit, and hold that achievement,
then I think we can certainly greet the
unknown with a cheer.”
Dan W. Tracy, former
President of the IBEW:
“I know the value of the Council and what it
has meant to our people in wage-hours
saved. Any person who has ever been
skeptical of the value of the Council,
should play a part in it, either as member or
as an observer. It would make them cherish
it as one of the greatest promoters of
labor-management relations that could be
achieved.”
Chief Judge Sobeloff, U.S. Court of
Appeals, Fourth Circuit:
(Jan. 23, 1963)
“The Council’s principal purpose is to
remove the causes of friction and dispute,
in the Electrical Contracting Industry, by
providing a forum for conciliation and settlement
of controversies between IBEW
Locals and NECA Chapters. It has aided in
creating a relatively strikeless climate within
the electrical construction industry, and it is
undisputed that, by and large, it has served
the parties well over years.”
Business Week—August 24, 1963:
“In only four day last week, 12 men disposed
of 22 labor-management disputes
that otherwise could have led to long and
costly strikes. They were members of one
of the oldest voluntary agencies for settling
disputes between employers and unions—the Council on Industrial Relations set up
in 1920 by the National Electrical
Contractors Associations and the
International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers.”
Honorable Wayne Morse of Oregon,
United States Senator: (May 4, 1963)
“Mr. President. 250 leaders of industry,
labor and the public have just spent two
days, at the invitation of the President, discussing
problems of labor and management
in the Nation’s present economic posture.
In light of this, my colleagues will be interested
I am sure in an account of a meeting
which also began on Monday of this week,
in Cincinnati, where the Council on
Industrial Relations of the Electrical
Contracting Industry considered its heaviest
caseload in its 42 year history. This unique
institution has been well described in an
article in the New York Times of May 21, by
John D. Pomfret. I ask unanimous consent
that this article be inserted in the Appendix
of the Record. There being no objection,
the article was ordered to be printed in the
Record.”
John H. Fanning
Former Chairman of the National Labor
Relations Board
June 29, 1987
“After virtually a lifetime of observing Labor
and Management trying to devise successful
mechanisms for the fair and peaceful
resolution of their disagreements, I have
seen none better than the Council on
Industrial Relations for the Electrical
Contracting Industry. I have sat in on some
of their meetings as a guest observer and
find it difficult, if at all possible, to distinguish
between Labor and Management
Representatives.”