Union Living


Country United States
State Cape Verde
City Las Vegas
Address 1500 E Tropicana Ave.
Phone 8559718989
Website https://unionliving.org

Union Living Reviews

Most Useful Comment
  • Nov 14, 2014

I typically do not write on these types of platforms. Then again, I have never come across such a sleezy company as Union Living.

I received a call from someone named Lewis/Louis who said he was "new and only had been working a couple weeks" for this company called Union Living. Well, that was the first lie. When I did a google search for this company another user has complained about them and said he spoke with the same person almost 3 months before I spoke to them.

Anyways, what made me stay on the phone longer than normal is that this company claimed to work with unions nationwide. Besides the name they use a ".org" to make the website come across as legit, but I found out they have zero affiliations with any union.

Basically, what they do is have a email newsletter that they blast out to union members and that is about it from what I could gather. However they don't affiliate with unions so very deceptive and confusing indeed. It is how they are trying to have credibility with consumers which is wrong.

Anyways, this Louis guy transfers me to what presumably is the owner of the website Michael. Since I am a Realtor he shows me how I can have Ad space on the website, because "union members are always looking for real estate services." Yea I know this already, but what should have really been a red flag was the cost.

The ad space for the whole year was only like $500 bucks. To get another county was about half. That was it. You know the whol saying "too good to be true?" Yea that is what I should have been saying. No other company that works with unions would be this so cheap (I know from past experience).

There was a whole lot of hard sales pitches, of course no statistical data on ad performance (even though my counties were so hot hot hot), bunch of crap, etc... I gotta admit these guys are good at sales though. Got me to go straight to my paypal account and pay a stranger $850 bucks before reviewing a contract at all.

So after that call I just feel like something was wrong, do my research, and realize this is a bad company. I try to stop the payment through paypal but was too late. Call up Union Living 3 days later (Purchased on a Friday) and this Michael guy tells me "oh well we have only a 48 hour window for a refund". Well that is interesting, because I never even received a contract or any paperwork/receipt of what I purchased with them.

After talking for a bit I convince him to give me a refund and I think the matter is done. Well, 1 month later still no refund. I did a fraud claim with my bank WF and got the money back that way. "Mysteriously" my phone calls to the main phone line stopped getting answered and went to voicemail. They were so easy to get a hold of before hahaha.

The day I filed a fraud claim to WF I called them up and basically told them to call me ASAP and this is what I am doing but of course no phone call.

Never work with Union Living. Besides them being a scam the services they are selling to Realtors (and probably others) is complete junk and a waste of money.

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Jul 23, 2014

They contact you to get you to advertise on their site but are unable to produce anything of value including analytics of web traffic. When asked to provide this information they become rude, arrogant and insulting....trying to play unsuspecting folks who like to help vets and civil servant workers with using .org and trying to seem non-profit.

  • Jun 27, 2014

I received a telephone call at my counseling/psychotherapy practice from a man named Lewis/Louis who asked whether I would be interested in providing counseling services to union members and if so would I please call him back. From the information in the message, it sounded like he was working for a union or for an EAP (employee assistance program) so I was eager to sign up. We played phone tag for two days and finally connected. He asked when we could schedule a time to go over some things by internet. He made some references to being busier than a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest. I laughed because I used to know someone who used to say that, but I did think it was an unusual way to speak during a business call. I told him I am available right now. He said okay, let's do that, because he wanted to make sure I got an opportunity because spaces fill up fast. This was the first time he said something that made me suspect a scam.

He directed me to a website www.unionliving.org. He asked me to click on California and then Orange County and then on real estate to see examples of what their ads look like. Once I had seen them, he then directed me back to my own state (Texas) and my own county (Bexar). He still wanted me to focus on real estate, though. Eventually we got to counseling (there were MANY related fields, too. I could selected counseling, marriage and family therapy, psychotherapy, psychologists, or PTSD. There may have been others.) He indicated that his organization has been serving union members for nine years and that one of the things the members ask for more than anything else is referrals to professionals. They say "We don't want to have to use the doctor our insurance company tells us to..." etc. (Okay, lots of people say that, right? It's possible.)

Then he gets to the price. It's $380.00 for a year for one category or $525.00 for two years, one category. I'm still interested (although not yet committed). He finds out I'm interested in the PTSD category and says that's a really high need area so he's going to go get Mr. Michaels out of his office right now and get him on the phone to get me a special deal. (It was really sounding like a sales pitch now, but still no red flags, because sales pitches is what sales people do, right? My father was a salesman until he retired. I don't have anything against salespeople doing their jobs...)

While I'm on hold I internet search the Better Business Bureau. (This is how I found out that the National Association of Professional Women was a scam, so I figured it could help.) The BBB hasn't heard of them. So...

Another man comes on the line and introduces himself as Tim. He says he understands I want the two year program and he's going to help me choose a category. I tell him I'm thinking of counseling and PTSD. The call shifts to a hard close. I backpeddal and ask for market research. I'm not the shrewdest business woman out there, but I'm not an idiot, either. I'd like to hear some numbers like "83% of those who join our program report an increase in business" or "all of our clients reported at least a 10% increase in sales" or something, anything, to try to get some type of idea what I could hope to expect to get out of a $525.00 investment. He said I was asking for that because I was "thinking of this like advertising" which it isn't. (If it's not advertising, why am I paying for it?) This is a special program to help the union members. (Okay, I'll agree to help. Sign me up no charge, please?) They're not like one of these Google programs with pays per clicks and all that nonsense and they're not Psychology Today (had I said I didn't approve of PT or google? Why the comparison?) I said "I need some type of market research or statistics or something" and he said that wasn't fair because some of the companies are in metropolitan areas and others are rural and you can't really make comparisons nationwide like that (isn't that why there are percentages? I took research methods. I'm pretty sure there's a way to perform a statistical analysis here...) I said "Okay, I'm going to do some research on my own and--" I was going to say call back to sign up in a few days.

But I didn't. Because as soon as I got to the word "research" he began to talk very rapidly and very loudly over me. He said "Okay, I'm going to let you go because I'm very busy." And he hung up.

I called back on Louis's number to say "Look, Tim hung up on me, but I'm still going to do the research and get back to you, okay?" but on Louis's number they picked up the phone and hung up on me. Nice.

Now that I'm off the phone I can think more clearly. I perform another internet search, and there's a Rip Off Report from someone who did pay them $380.00 for the year and who claims it is false or misleading advertising and/or a scam. I am writing this report to warn anyone else about this company. It sounds fishy. They won't (or can't) provide any statistics. Keep looking through the site. It's mostly blank, except for Orange County. If I had more time to research, I would actually call those therapists in Orange county and see if they actually have practices or if they are made up ads from not even real people. What a load of you-know-what.

Rip off report asks if I used a credit card for this transaction. Fortunately, I bailed before I fell for it, so no... but I would have. I wonder if they would have accepted it or not.

  • Jul 7, 2014

It actually worked for me.

I also received a call from union living asking me to sign up, and as a lawyer I was very suspicious. I personally hate telemarketers, but it was a slow day so I listened. I signed up for two counties. Needless to say the next day I felt like a sucker because I had so easily been duped out of a 1050.00 dollars. I was going to call back and cancel but when I did they assured me it was a good investment. 30 days past and I felt like a world class tool when I got a call from a union member who had been in a car accident. Its been 90 days, and while I only got 4 cases in that time frame its proved to be a good investment. Sure, I was a skeptic, but I was wrong. Maybe you should have tried it out, because it has really benefited my business

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