Posted on 06/27/2018 12:45:29 PM PDT by lightman
Educators in ActionWorker Rights June 27, 2018 10:23AM Supreme Court Ruling in Janus Deals Blow to Working Families
By John Rosales
The collective voice of American workers was undermined today by the U.S. Supreme Courts ruling in Janus v. American Federation of County, State Municipal Employees.
In a 5-to-4 decision, which casts aside decades of precedents and laws, the court has eliminated a public-sector unions ability to collect fair share or agency fees from workers who choose not to join as union members but are still protected by union agreements. The ruling undermines the ability of educators to come together and bargain collectively on behalf of students.
A strong union and collective bargaining agreements are what help to ensure students receive the tools and resources they need to succeed in school and in life, says NEA President Lily Eskelsen García. Weve seen it in the resources available to our students, and we have felt it in our paychecks.
The ruling comes in a case that has been bankrolled by corporate interests wanting to rig the economic system further in their favor while robbing teachers, education support professionals (ESP), higher education faculty, corrections officers, sanitation and other workers of the freedom to join together to earn a decent living, provide for their families, and advocate for the needs of students.
All over the country, they are cutting funding for arts and PE, up-to-date textbooks, recess, and class sizes that allow for one-on-one instruction, says Eskelsen García. Many of our schools have faced serious funding cuts that are likely to grow even worse. Collective bargaining has been a critical tool to push back against these cuts and demand the resources our students deserve.
Fair-share fees help cover the cost of union representation and bargaining services that support high quality public schools and benefit employees by ensuring that their union can strongly advocate for them. This court decision comes as millions of American workers recommit to their unions and launch new organizing drives, and as support for labor unions has risen to its highest level in years.
Regardless of todays Supreme Court decision, we must remain united and make it clear that no court decision can stop our union, says Denise Specht, president of Education Minnesota (EM). Neither this ruling nor the right-wing groups that will weaponize it, will silence the voices of Minnesotas professional educators.
A strong union and collective bargaining agreements are what help to ensure students receive the tools and resources they need to succeed in school and in life. Weve seen it in the resources available to our students, and we have felt it in our paychecks. NEA President Lily Eskelsen García
The Janus decision will affect millions of workers in the nearly half of the states that require payments from nonmembers to cover the cost of collective bargaining.
We will still stand for effective and welcoming schools for our students, proud and healthy communities for their parents, and salaries and benefits that will sustain the families of Minnesota educators and those across the nation, Specht says.
The National Education Association, the nations largest union with more than 3 million members, filed an amicus brief in the case with the American Association of University Professors and many NEA affiliates. The brief highlighted the radical nature of the plaintiffs arguments, including their legally unsupported claim that public-sector collective bargaining itself is constitutionally suspect.
The claimant, Mark Janus, is an Illinois state social worker. He argues that his First Amendment liberties were violated because he had to pay an agency fee to the union even though he is not a member and might disagree with its political policies.
In 1977, the courts unanimous decision in Abood v. Detroit Board of Education said localities and states could authorize public-employee unions to charge nonmembers for the cost of collective bargaining (fair share fees) but not for the unions political activities. By overturning Abood, the court eliminated non-members fair share fees, though unions are still required by law to represent them. As a result of the decision, some workers will now have to make up for the costs others inflict on the union but decline to pay for. Allowing some employees to opt out of paying their fair share for union representation will make it harder for all public employees to advocate for the quality services that everyone depends on.
But this case was never about merits or law. It was about politics and rigging the system, economy, and democracy in favor of the wealthy and corporate CEOs.
Strong unions build strong schools and strong communities, says Alex Price, band director and instrumental music teacher, Belmont High School and Wright Brothers Middle School in Dayton, Ohio. Fine arts programs were being cut from my school and students were missing out on subjects like arts and music. My union negotiated with the district to bring back music so our students could have a well-rounded curriculum.
When some school principals tried to renege on the agreement, as a union, we stepped in, says Price, a member of the Dayton Education Association. Educators came together through our union and spoke out for what our kids need.
Public opinion of teachers unions is robust. According to a recent NPR/Ipsos poll, two-thirds of those polled approve of teachers unions, three-quarters approve of educators right to strike, and just one in four believe educators in this country are paid fairly. Take the #RedForEd pledge and stand with NEA as we continue to build a strong union that advocates for the opportunity students need to succeed.
Recent #RedforEd actions in states like West Virginia, Arizona, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Kentucky have highlighted how educators are leading a nationwide movement to better fund our schools and better support our students. This action is yielding not only public support but measurable wins for students and educators as well as gains in members. NEA membership is at its highest level in the past five years, including fast growth in states where anti-union laws already exist.
Some 39 briefs signed on to by hundreds of amici representing all levels of government, public officials, civil rights organizations, academic experts, and others were filed with the court in support of the respondents. Weighing in on the case have been 22 states and the District of Columbia, dozens of cities, and several dozen Republican lawmakers. School district and public hospitals also exhibited their support of fair share fees as helping to boost the effective management of public services.
For more information about the case, including links to friend of the court briefs, editorial columns by experts opposing the lawsuit, and other data, go to www.neatoday.org/janus.
Virtually all “ecucation funds” go to educators
The students get none
Wait until the Strzok leaks start and he betrays Comey and Mueller.
My wife is a civilian employee of the DoD. Thank goodness she started work in Virginia so she didn’t have to join the union.
A step in the right direction but ultimately the court should apply the same law to every unionized employee, not just those in public service unions.
And the Right To Work laws should apply to every state.
And, in the “professional” public unions, such as Teacher Unions, they will shun and exclude any colleague who dares to object to having their pocket picked.
It has always been immoral in extreme for them to do this.
Party A (Teachers Union) would bargain with Party B (School Board/District) to pick the pocket of Party C (non-compliant teachers).
A real money racket for decades. I recall Judge Souder voting with the Unions...He knew it was unconstitutional, but voted with them anyway. His reason? Quote: “for Labor Peace”. He was a real POS.
And, in the “professional” public unions, such as Teacher Unions, they will shun and exclude any colleague who dares to object to having their pocket picked.
It has always been immoral in extreme for them to do this.
Party A (Teachers Union) would bargain with Party B (School Board/District) to pick the pocket of Party C (non-compliant teachers).
A real money racket for decades. I recall Judge Souder voting with the Unions...He knew it was unconstitutional, but voted with them anyway. His reason? Quote: “for Labor Peace”. He was a real POS.
I have been on the school board side of contract negotiations & I can state for a fact students were not mentioned except when it came to class size. Its all about money & working days & benefits.
YOUR "WORKING CLASS FAMILY" LEFTIST CRAP DOESN'T FLY LIKE IT USED TO!
My sister was forced to be a Teamster for many years. Before she became the boss her old boss mentioned he had found some massive corruption within the Teamsters Union and was going to bring it to light.
About two weeks after he told my sister he was found in his home dead with three bullets in his chest. The cops never really tried to investigate and closed the case almost immediately saying it was a break-in robbery.
Please, Freepers, refresh my memory.
IIRC, none other than FDR said that government employee unions would be impossible. JFK enabled them through an Executive Order.
What is their legal authority for existing? Has it been enshrined in law, or is it just custom, build on JFK’s EO?
If so, and the EO were reversed, heads would surely explode. But, I can’t believe that such a reversal is possible after 55 or so years in existence, which is why I am asking what the basis in law is for Federal employee unions such as the SEIU.
WINNING!
So one is no longer forced to support democrats......where’s the downside!!
LOL! The gall.
Maybe some employees think the socialist practices of unions don’t benefit them.
Maybe the good employees don’t think it’s a good idea that bad ones are so difficult to remove.
Maybe some employees think pay should be on merit, not simply on tenure.
The more money spent on bad, or less effective employees, the less money there is for the good ones.
“President John Kennedy established the role of federal employee unions after his election in 1962 when he issued Executive Order 10988. The role of unions was very limited but it established the legitimacy of unions in government, over the strenuous objections of some, in representing employees in narrow, heavily restricted ways.
“In the 1960s, federal unions were not thought of as participants in national politics. If they had been seen as political foes, it is unlikely that Republican President Richard Nixon would have expanded the role of unions with Executive Order 11491 in 1969. His order gave unions more power to bargain and to contest agency decisions.”
The “Municipal”/government unionizing is a scam. There should never be a union between government servants and the people who pay them to do their job. In regards to non government unions, I believe every American should be able to choose if they want to be in a union. Extortion of dues speaks for itself.
I thought the same thing about unions. After research, I found they were candy coated communism.
“....but an arm of the Socialist (democrat) party.”
Ya mean the American Socialist Party? (ASP)
AKA Snakes in the grass......
My mom was a union member for over 10 years. One little bitty chemical plant explosion that killed 23 people and started lockouts on others trying to go back to work. The union told them they couldn’t help them or arbitrate..... there was no money.
No, their primary responsibility in the eyes of the union leaders is not to the members ... it's the preservation of the union. And being unable to collect dues from members who are not represented in the political deal-making of the union bosses is devastating to them!
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