Friday, May 24, 2013

Labor Unions Win Big in Minnesota

By the narrowest of margins (2 votes) the Minnesota legislature voted to give certain in-home child-care providers and personal care attendants (PCAs) the right to unionize.  This comes at a time when nearby states are curbing organized labor’s clout.  For example, last year Wisconsin eliminated union rights to bargain over wages, etc. in public schools and most other public sector jobs, and Indiana and Michigan passed “Right-To-Work” legislation, where union membership cannot be made a mandatory condition of employment.  By contrast, the new Minnesota law stands to benefit two labor unions that lobbied aggressively for its passage.  The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), is organizing the in-home child-care providers and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is seeking to represent the in-home PCAs.  As with most hotly contested political issues, opinions on the impact of this legislation depends on who is talking.

The unions and their supporters say the new law merely allows eligible child-care and personal care attendants the option to vote on whether or not they want a union.  Of course they also claim that union representation will translate into higher pay, greater benefits and training (which they equate with improving quality of care).  Left unanswered is a question all too often ignored in politics these days:  Who will pay for all this, including the dues these unions will undoubtedly charge?  The providers of these critical in-home services will have no choice but to raise their rates and the state, with tax dollars, will have to pick up the tab. 

Opponents of this law are left to lick fresh wounds.  They argued, obviously unsuccessfully, that passage of this bill was tantamount to the DFL-controlled Minnesota legislature simply repaying AFSCME and the SEIU for making significant campaign contributions to help elect a DFL majority.  With an estimated 21,000 in-home child-care and personal care attendants now open for organizing, the union dues they would be charged could bring in millions per year in new revenues for these two unions.   Because these union revenues would come, albeit indirectly, from tax payers to cover the necessary price hikes providers must charge, opponents see this new law as diverting public monies to unions as a payback for help in last year’s elections.

Perhaps lost in all the political rhetoric is the fact that this legislation goes beyond simply allowing people a choice.  Anyone who knows how union organizing really works knows that union elections are a far cry from “just letting people vote for or against a union.”  As with any union vote, all the union needs to win are a majority of those who show up to vote.  For example, if only 1,000 of the estimated 21,000 eligible voters actually vote, the unions would need only 501 votes in their favor to win.  What’s more – and few people, including the care providers themselves, realize this – if the unions win, they win representational status for all 21,000 individuals, including those who choose not to vote and those who vote against the union! 

The legislature had to make sweeping changes and redefine relationships across the state to make it possible for these two unions to have a shot at organizing 21,000 new dues-paying members.  Besides changing the legal landscape of well-established laws of union organizing, the new law effectively redefines the covered providers as all being employed by the State of Minnesota.  Yet most in-home care providers work for themselves; that is, they are considered in the eyes of existing law to be so-called “independent contractors” and not employees.  Those that do not work for themselves are employed by hundreds of small employers.  Whereas union organizing has forever sought the union’s status to bargain on behalf of employees, with their employers, the new law groups independent contractors with employees for the purpose of bargaining with the state!  By pure political fiat these diverse groups have been effectively re-designated as employees of the State of Minnesota, all to pave the way for two unions to organize thousands of new members.

Numerous legal challenges to this new law are expected.  If the union-supporting politicians win in court, it begs the question:  Who is next?  If the State of Minnesota can essentially annex entire occupations to make individuals working in those fields employees of the state, what would stop the legislature and governor from going after plumbers, electricians, lawyers, and doctors?  The only requirements seem to be that (1) government monies are flowing their way, and (2) a politically active union wants the ability to organize them.  Unfortunately, today all too often companies in the private sector rely on government monies as government continues to grow as a dominant player in the economy.

One legislator who supported the AFSCME/SEIU bill was asked to respond to the opposition’s claim that people who do not want union representation could be forced into a union by this law.  The legislator glibly replied:  “If they don’t want the union, they can simply choose not to take the government’s money” (state subsidies to pay for child and personal in-home care).  The irony of this is that the new union organizing law was accompanied by tax hikes on many businesses and higher wage earners.  When the government takes more and more of businesses’ money it gets harder and harder for them not to rely for their survival on some of the government’s handouts of that money.  Unfortunately, government handouts come with conditions.  In this case, the conditions appear to have been set by organized labor – allow union organizing or stay away from the government’s money!

Judge Postpones Implementation of Governor Dayton's Executive Order Permitting Daycare Workers to Vote to Unionize

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Another Win for Employer Rights - The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Struck Down the NLRB's "11-by-17" Poster Requirements

In another win for Employer rights, an appeals court on May 7, 2013 struck down a federal rule that would have required millions of businesses to put up posters informing workers of their right to form a union.

The poster rule would have required businesses to display an 11-by-17-inch notice in a prominent location explaining the rights of workers to join a union and bargain collectively to improve wages and working conditions.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia said the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) violated employers' free speech rights in trying to force them to display the posters or face charges of committing an unfair labor practice.

This ruling is another victory for Employers. Earlier this year, the same appeals court threw into question hundreds of other NLRB decisions after finding that President Obama's recess appointments to the board were unconstitutional. The Obama administration is appealing that decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. We will need to wait and see if the Obama administration appeals this ruling as well.

NLRB Postpones its Mandatory Notice-Posting Until 1/31/2012