Center for Union Facts logo

Union Facts

Iron Workers, Local 321

Basic Information

Local 321

Quick Facts

Address

IRON WORKERS
1315 W 2ND ST
LITTLE ROCK, AR 72201

Financial Information

The Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA), which is enforced by the Office of Labor-Management Standards, requires labor unions to file annual reports detailing their operations. Contained in those reports are breakdowns of each union's spending, income and other financial information.

Basic Financials

Total Assets $336,759
Total Liabilities $6,671
Total Income $388,890
Total Spent $403,646

Total Assets Trend

Assets (Change from previous report)

Cash $203,909 (-6.7%)
Accounts Receivable $0 (0.0%)
Investments $0 (0.0%)
Fixed Assets $129,953 (0.0%)
Treasury Securities $0 (0.0%)
Other Assets $2,897 (+3,308.2%)
Loans Receivable $0 (0.0%)

Liabilities

Loans Payable $0
Accounts Payable $0
Other Liabilities $6,671
Mortgages $0

Income

Dues $57,172
Per Person Tax $0
Investments $0
Supplies $1,537
Loan Repayment $0
Interest $7
Dividends $0
Rents $9,900
Fees and Fines $246,857
Loans Obtained $0
Other Receipts $30,030
Affiliates $41,066
Members $2,321
Reinvestments $0
All Others $14,510

Source: Office of Labor Management Standards

Year Covered: 2022  •  Last Updated: June 12th, 2023

Spending

The Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS) requires unions to report how they spent their money in a number of categories. For the first five, OLMS requires unions to provide detailed information on any recipient that received more than $5,000 per year.

Spending Overview

Spending Breakdown

Representational $54,887 (13.60%)
Political Activities and Lobbying $9,443 (2.34%)
Contributions, Gifts, and Grants $500 (0.12%)
General Overhead $77,638 (19.23%)
Union Administration $51,801 (12.83%)
Strike Benefits $0 (0.00%)
To Union Officers $64,455 (15.97%)
To Union Employees $35,461 (8.79%)
Education $0 (0.00%)
Fees $0 (0.00%)

Search All Spending

Source: Office of Labor Management Standards

Year Covered: 2022  •  Last Updated: June 12th, 2023

Membership

Membership Trend

YearMembers
2002348
2003300
2004272
2005255
2006243
2007229
2008229
2009231
2010211
2011196
2012195
2013181
2014176
2015166
2016177
2017175
2018166
2019187
2020191
2021183
2022180

Source: Office of Labor Management Standards

Year Covered: 2022  •  Last Updated: June 12th, 2023

Leaders & Salaries

Top Ten Highest Paid Leaders

NameTitleTotal Compensation
JOHNNY WILSONFST/BM$94,433
KATHY BABCOCK-DOBBINSOFFICE MANAGER$24,340
SARAH HANKSOFFICE MANAGER$18,240
JD KEELINGEXAM/EXEC BOARD$0
JEFFERY ESTEPEXECUTIVE COMMITTEE$0
GEORGE FREWTRUSTEE$0
WESSLEY SMITHPRESIDENT $0
LEON WOLFORDEXAMINING COMMITTEE$0
MARK SIBLEYEXECUTIVE COMMITTEE$0
MICHAEL RAGGIOVP/SERGEANT-AT-ARMS $0

Source: Office of Labor Management Standards

Year Covered: 2022  •  Last Updated: June 12th, 2023

Crime, Corruption & Racketeering

The Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS) conducts investigations to determine if violations of the Labor-Management Relations and Disclosure Act (LMRDA) provisions have occurred.

Investigations are initiated based on various sources such as complaints from union members; information developed by OLMS as a result of reviewing reports filed; information developed during an OLMS audit of a union’s books and records; and information obtained from other government agencies. Investigations may involve civil matters (such as an election of union officers) or criminal matters (such as embezzlement of union funds).

Corruption and Embezzlement Charges

Type of Criminal ActivityNumber of Instances
criminal charges2
embezzlement charges2
Guilty Pleas2
Officials Sentenced1

Some incidents may be accounted for in multiple categories.

Source: Office of Labor-Management Standards

Last Updated: April 8th, 2021

Financial Audits

The Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS) has responsibility under the Labor-Management Relations and Disclosure Act (LMRDA) to conduct audits to determine if unions are complying with the law.

OLMS uses a streamlined audit approach called the Compliance Audit Program (CAP) to audit local unions which utilizes specialized records review and investigative techniques to verify LMRDA compliance.

Source: Office of Labor-Management Standards

Last Updated: November 15th, 2016

Recent Contract Negotiations

Map of recent contract negotiations
IndustryContracts
Construction3
Not Provided2