Posted on 03/31/2005 1:15:45 PM PST by truth49
Is it right to force an individual to pay money to an employee organization for the privilege of working in Washington state? Union officials are asking state workers to do just that.
Hundreds of state employees in at least 12 bargaining units are working to decertify the unions representing them in order to avoid paying mandatory union dues. Representatives from several of these groups staged a rally on the Capitol lawn in Olympia on March 22. These employees are fed up with union representation before it has even started.
The Personnel System Reform Act of 2002 allows public-sector unions to negotiate wage and hour guidelines for employees. The governors office and representatives of nearly twenty public-sector unions negotiated the first collective bargaining agreements in 2004. Governor Gregoires newly-released budget funds these agreements. Pending final approval by the Legislature, the contracts will take effect on July 1, 2005.
The contracts include a mechanism known as a union security clause, which requires all employees of a bargaining unit to pay for union representation, regardless of whether they actually become members. Dues are set at 1.37 percent of an employees salary, up to about $55 dollars a month. Those who do not wish to join the union will still be required to pay a fair share fee equal to the normal dues amount.
Employees who refuse to authorize the dues deduction from their paycheck will face termination, as indicated in the contract negotiated by the union.
The Washington Federation of State Employees (WFSE) downplays the reality of the mandatory dues scheme. In a flyer passed out to state employees, the WFSE insists that employees who do not pay union dues will be asked to contribute the fair share fee. The flyer fails to mention that employees who decline will be terminated at the unions demand.
State workers trying to decertify the union believe individuals should have the choice of whether to join a union and pay dues: they do not want the decision imposed on them.
Other public employees object to the new collective bargaining agreement because they were never given a chance to approve it. The agreement went to a vote by state employees, and of the approximately 30,000 general government employees covered by the WFSE contract, only 6,133 voted.
Union officials said it was because they had difficulty in reaching all affected employees before the deadline for ratification. As a result, thousands were never informed of the details of the contract or of their right to approve or deny it. Some received notification the day before the vote. One DSHS employee learned of the vote 15 minutes before the polls closed. Many employees were unable to obtain a copy of the contract they were asked to ratify, making it impossible to know what they were voting on.
According to employees covered by the Washington Public Employees Association contract, some nonmembers in the bargaining units were told they would have to join the union for the right to ratify the contract, amounting to a poll tax for the privilege of voicing their opinion on their own contract.
State employees trying to decertify their union also object to being forced to support the political agendas of union officials. The WFSE admits that 17 percent of its expenditures go toward activities that have nothing to do with collective bargaining. The Federation made more than $280,000 in cash contributions in the 2004 elections, and many state workers do not want to be forced to support a particular political agenda in order to keep their jobs.
Union members can request a rebate of these political expenditures, but in doing so they must resign from the union and pay the fair share fee, terminating their right to vote on employment contracts or participate in union business. So, unless the public employee pays for the unions politics, he or she has no voice in the union.
Union membership is on a fifty-year decline. According to the most recent statistics released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, only 12.5 percent of American workers belonged to a union in 2004, down from 13.5 percent in 2000, and 20.1 percent in 1983.
Is it any wonder? As long as unions attempt to grow membership rolls through coercion and forced dues, workers can be expected to be disenchanted with their representative.
Individuals should be free to work in Washington without being forced to pay a third party. It may be time for the Washington Legislature to consider passing a law to make union membership a voluntary choice. Otherwise, the individuals terminated in July for refusing to pay union dues may solve Governor Gregoires unsustainable budget woes.
Michael Reitz is director of the Teachers Paycheck Protection, a project of the Evergreen Freedom Foundation, a non-partisan, public policy watchdog organization, focused on advancing individual liberty, a free-market economy, and limited and responsible government.
I bet the union won't have a problem reaching them all to confiscate their wages.
Bump
It seems to me that the union is breaking the law here (as if that's any big surprise)
Who said it would be used for non-work related causes? Negotiation is a work related cause. Any safety, retirement or pension issues are work related. Like anywhere else, if they don't like it they can leave.
Lobbying on behalf of the workers I am sure. You don't trust big government. You don't trust Dimorats. Now you're saying you don't trust union leaders voted in by the workers? You're not a very trusting soul, are you?
You'll need an initiative to usher in right-to-work.
I doubt it. NEA routinely lobbies for pro-homosexual issues and for abortion. What do they have to do with education? The union leadership is not watching out for the workers. Ever
Government worker unions are even worse. Most of the lobbying they do has no affect or relation to work issues. They are pushing a democrat agenda, nothing more or less. The worker be damned, the state be damned, the country be damned, as long as the union leadership gets what it wants. Jackals and parasites, every last one of them
You don't trust big government. You don't trust Dimorats. Now you're saying you don't trust union leaders voted in by the workers?
Union leaders are almost without exception big-government democrat backers. Why should I trust them, they are the enemy. Union elections are probably even more fraudulent than political elections
You're not a very trusting soul, are you?
Why should I trust people whose main goal in life is to destroy the country I love?
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