UPS Drivers Sue Teamsters for Forcing Nonmembers to Subsidize Organizing Activities and Union Strike Fund
Today, the Foundation issued a news release announcing parallel federal lawsuits concerning illegal forced dues:
With free legal aid from the National Right to Work Foundation, three UPS employees in Kentucky and two UPS employees in Ohio filed federal lawsuits Friday and Monday, respectively, against national and local Teamsters officials for illegal extraction of forced union dues.
In the lawsuits, the nonmember employees claim that the national and local unions breached their duty of fair representation and violated the employees’ First and Fifth Amendment rights by charging and collecting fees used for organizing nonunion workers throughout the United States and financing a members-only “Strike and Defense Fund.”
Read the rest of the Foundation’s news release here.
Palmetto State Union Boss Publishes Lies (Surprise, Surprise)
Erin McKee, top boss of the Charleston Labor Council, has written a mind-numbingly ignorant (or intentionally misleading) response to an op-ed which outlines the mass rewriting of federal labor law Big Labor is hoping for after the 2008 election. Several of Boss McKee’s assertions are just downright factually incorrect.
Lie #1:
Mr. Factor points out that [Big] labor’s agenda is to get the Employee Free Choice Act passed, which is true. If a majority of employees have signed cards saying they want a union, it doesn’t end there. They would then be allowed to have a fair election process and not be lied to, harassed and fired.
But as has been pointed out elsewhere, the text of the misnamed EFCA reveals that once union organizers present the signed cards of even the smallest majority of workers in a unit, the National Labor Relations Board "shall not direct an election but shall certify the individual or labor organization as the representative." In other words, card check does effectively eliminate the secret ballot from union certification drives. The less-abusive current election process would be replaced by one-on-one harassment from union goons.
Lie #2:
In a right to work state such as South Carolina, the union is forced to represent everyone in the bargaining unit. This means that everyone benefits, not just those who choose to pay the union dues for the benefits they receive. (If you think this is fair, let’s try running our government this way and see what happens.)
Right to Work laws merely ensure that workers cannot be forced to pay tribute to an unwanted union. Unfortunately, even non members are forced to accept the union’s so-called representation, even when it works against them. It’s illegal for workers to bargain with their employer on their own merits.
Further, federal law doesn’t require that unions represent non-members, they seek and obtain monopoly bargaining status. Plus, as I have previously explained, if union bosses were serious about eliminating the so-called "free rider" problem, they would oppose federal and state monopoly bargaining statutes. They don’t. They want them.
Lie #3:
Mr. Factor also seems to have a problem with the Public Safety Employer-Employee Cooperation Act. He states that public-safety employees would no longer be permitted to bargain individually and could be forced to accept a union’s representation. Do local governments have the manpower to negotiate a bargaining agreement with each employee individually, or would it be more effective if management worked with employees to come up with a wage and benefits package?
Yes, they do actually. Municipalities all over the country do it. (For a good summary of the more-aptly titled Police & Fire Monopoly Bargaining Act, check out this month’s Labor Watch article by Stan Greer of the National Institute for Labor Relations Research.)
Boss McKee’s language in this passage is particularly revealing of Big Labor’s patronizing attitude toward workers. Instead of each employee negotiating with the employer, union cheifs like McKee claim to want "management [to work] with employees to come up with a wage and benefits package." But what exactly is the difference? How is that not what is occurring when individual employees have the opportunity to negotiate directly with the employer? Why should a majority of the employee’s co-workers get to pick the employee’s representation? Even criminal defendants get to pick their own representation!
New Right to Work Video Report: Union Militants Display Nonmembers’ Social Security Numbers
Foundation attorneys have filed an unprecedented lawsuit in North Carolina state court on behalf of 16 AT&T employees against local union bosses who illegally released their confidential personal information (including their social security numbers) as retaliation for exercising their right to refrain from union membership. Two of the workers explain their battle in the latest Right to Work video report…
For more background information on the case, the Foundation’s press release is available online here. The Burlington Times-News‘ coverage of the lawsuit is available online here.
Be sure to subscribe to the Foundation’s YouTube Channel for more Right to Work video reports.
American Bar Association Presents Another Biased Panel on Right to Work Cases: Individual Employees’ Perspective Again Barred
In what has become an annual (or rather semi-annual) tradition, the increasingly discredited American Bar Association (ABA) is once again pointedly excluding the viewpoints of individual employees who don’t want a union in their workplace.
The intellectually dishonest organization is holding its second annual Labor and Employment Law Continuing Legal Education Conference in Denver this September. The cover of the event brochure (pdf) trumpets a panel titled "Hot Topic: Neutrality Agreements, Card Checks, and Voluntary Recognition After Dana."
The core case at issue, Dana/Metaldyne, was brought and won by National Right to Work Foundation staff attorneys, and most of the law in this area is the result of Foundation litigation. Yet, the roster of attorneys on the panel again consists entirely of union, company, and government lawyers.
Foundation VP Stefan Gleason wrote the following about the anti-individual worker bias of the ABA back in February, the last time Foundation attorneys were excluded from speaking about its many cases, and the criticism therein is only reinforced by this latest episode:
ABA political hacks have pointedly refused to allow the perspective of employees who may, God forbid, not want a union to dominate their workplace. Once again, a hot topic at the conference was the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation’s cases defending employees whose rights are abused during card check organizing drives.
And yet again, the ABA meeting planners refused to allow the perspective of workers or their Right to Work attorneys to be heard — instead selecting speakers representing Big Labor and a small faction of squishy, union-boss-friendly management lawyers. (Of course, the views of the speakers were rejected by the NLRB in its recent Dana/Metaldyne ruling, and the views of Foundation attorneys were embraced. Just a technicality, I guess.)
The ABA’s intellectual dishonesty continues to be an embarrassment to America’s legal profession.
EXPOSED: Naked CNA Union Boss Hypocrisy
Union boss hypocrisy is nothing new, but this recent case, filed by two nurses in Houston, Texas against the CNA union and Tenet Healthcare shows just how blatant that hypocrisy can be.
When the SEIU bosses got themselves a sweetheart deal to organize nurses from the top down with Catholic Healthcare Partners in Ohio, CNA/NNOC denounced the deal as an illegitimate sell out of workers’ rights to a free and fair election, and workers’ rights to choose or reject unionization with full information, and without coercion or discrimination:
Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the nurses association, condemned this [SEIU] agreement. She called it “a rigged scam” in which the service employees union would bargain only half-heartedly if it won the vote.
“This was a top-down deal between an employer and a hand-picked union,” Ms. DeMoro said. “There was a gag order on everyone, and as a result this was a banana republic election.”
CNA/NNOC even went so far as to create anti-SEIU websites accusing that union of selling out workers while cutting secret sweetheart deals with management, in exchange for assistance organizing new workers from the top down.
This is the game that union bosses play nowadays: they increasingly fail in organizing workers the old fashioned way, since workers increasingly aren’t buying what the union bosses are selling. So, the union bosses try to organize companies, not workers, in what is known as “top down” organizing.
But all of this moaning and whining about SEIU’s secret “neutrality” deals has not stopped the CNA/NNOC brass from cutting their own secret sweetheart deals with companies. CNA/NNOC’s latest deal is a secret “neutrality” agreement with Tenet Healthcare, a nationwide hospital chain.
Under the agreement, Tenet is gagged from saying anything about the union, nurses’ personal information is handed to the union without their consent, and union agents get wide access to campaign inside the hospital facilities while anti-CNA nurses are barred from effectively providing an opposing view in their own workplaces. Perhaps worst of all, the NLRB is cut out from overseeing the process, which results in Potemkin Village “consent elections” in which the NLRB does nothing other than tally up “yes” votes and “no” votes and provide a veneer of legitimacy.
Sounds like a sweetheart deal to us: nurses handed over to the union with no real campaign about the effects of unionization, and no effective federal agency to oversee the process!
In fact, CNA chief DeMoro’s description of a "rigged scam," a "top-down deal between an employer and a hand-picked union," and a "banana republic election" is a strikingly apt description of DeMoro’s own CNA union’s secret deal with Tenet.
Shameless…
Even Far Left Icon George McGovern Says “No” to Coercive Card Check Organizing
Far Left stalwart and former Democratic nominee for President George McGovern comes out swinging in the pages of the Wall Street Journal against Big Labor’s demand for mandating coercive card check in union organizing drives:
Voting is an immense privilege.
That is why I am concerned about a new development that could deny this freedom to many Americans. As a longtime friend of labor unions, I must raise my voice against pending legislation I see as a disturbing and undemocratic overreach not in the interest of either management or labor.
The legislation is called the Employee Free Choice Act, and I am sad to say it runs counter to ideals that were once at the core of the labor movement. Instead of providing a voice for the unheard, EFCA risks silencing those who would speak.
The key provision of EFCA is a change in the mechanism by which unions are formed and recognized. Instead of a private election with a secret ballot overseen by an impartial federal board, union organizers would simply need to gather signatures from more than 50% of the employees in a workplace or bargaining unit, a system known as "card-check." There are many documented cases where workers have been pressured, harassed, tricked and intimidated into signing cards that have led to mandatory payment of dues.
Under EFCA, workers could lose the freedom to express their will in private, the right to make a decision without anyone peering over their shoulder, free from fear of reprisal.
There’s no question that unions have done much good for this country. Their tenacious efforts have benefited millions of workers and helped build a strong middle class. They gave workers a new voice and pushed for laws that protect individuals from unfair treatment. They have been a friend to the Democratic Party, and so I oppose this legislation respectfully and with care.
To my friends supporting EFCA I say this: We cannot be a party that strips working Americans of the right to a secret-ballot election. We are the party that has always defended the rights of the working class. To fail to ensure the right to vote free of intimidation and coercion from all sides would be a betrayal of what we have always championed.
Some of the most respected Democratic members of Congress — including Reps. Marcy Kaptur of Ohio, George Miller and Pete Stark of California, and Barney Frank of Massachusetts — have advised that workers in developing countries such as Mexico insist on the secret ballot when voting as to whether or not their workplaces should have a union. We should have no less for employees in our country.
I worry that there has been too little discussion about EFCA’s true ramifications, and I think much of the congressional support is based on a desire to give our friends among union leaders what they want. But part of being a good steward of democracy means telling our friends "no" when they press for a course that in the long run may weaken labor and disrupt a tried and trusted method for conducting honest elections.
[Emphasis added]
Good for McGovern for acknowledging a few basic truths about the abuses of card check that Big Labor apologists continue to deny.
McGovern points out, correctly, that card check runs "counter to ideals that were once at the core of the labor movement." Of course, so does forced unionism generally. Samuel Gompers founded the AFL on the principles of volunteerism (as opposed to today’s compulsory system).
It’s important to note that, while the current process may be less abusive than mandated card check, majority rule by secret ballot (in the labor law context) is controversial and unjust in and of itself. No worker should be stripped of his legal right to represent himself in private employment matters and be forced into a monopoly union collective by a vote of even the majority of his peers.
Despite AWOL Bush Adminstration, Court Clears Path for Breakthrough Against Union Kickback Schemes in Federal Contracting
In a breakthrough appellate court ruling, Iron Worker Union officials can now be sued under anti-trust laws for running a union kickback scheme known as "job targeting" which has diverted $500 million in workers wages over the past 5 years.
Job targeting schemes are primary tools used to secure a Big Labor cartel over billions of taxpayer dollars used in federal contracting (as well as many private construction projects). They are used to freeze non-union contractors out of getting work, while lining the union bosses’ pockets with the wages of construction workers.
Attorney Mike Avakian, General Counsel of the Center for National Labor Policy, brought the cutting-edge suit for several New England companies, and National Right to Work Foundation attorneys submitted an amicus curiae (.pdf) brief because job targeting schemes severely undermine non-union employees’ interests. Here’s a quick preview from the Daily Labor Report, a subscribers-only service:
Five nonunion steel erector companies in New England may proceed with their claims that a job targeting fund run by the Iron Workers and other activity in conjunction with union contractors violated federal antitrust and labor laws, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit ruled Aug. 1 (Am. Steel Erectors Inc. v. Local 7, Int’l Ass’n of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental & Reinforcing Iron Workers, 1st Cir., No. 07-1832, 8/1/08).
. . .
The Iron Workers created a job targeting program called the Market Recovery Program (MRP) to help mitigate the disadvantage for union contractors. The union targets certain construction projects and offers a subsidy to signatory contractors bidding on the project. When a signatory contractor wins a contract on a targeted project, the union and the contractor execute an agreement specifying the terms and the amount of the subsidy. The MRP is funded by money withheld by union contractors from union members’ paychecks.
In other words, job targeting schemes enable union officials to seize and funnel part of workers’ paychecks back to the union contractors, enabling such firms to undercut competitors’ bids by artificially lowering operating costs (through kickbacks of artificially high forced union dues). Meanwhile, the workers receive lower wages in effect.
The case also alleges that these funds were used to bully businesses to renege on agreements with nonunion companies by targeting them for picketing, harassment, and intimidation.
All in all, a pretty sordid tale. On appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit determined that the union was not exempt from federal anti-trust law, allowing the plaintiffs to proceed with their suit in U.S. District Court. Key quote from the decision (.pdf – emphasis mine):
Nonetheless, unions, particularly when acting in concert with non-labor groups, are not given carte blanche to engage in anticompetitive activities. As the Supreme Court has explained, "[i]t would be a surprising thing if Congress, in order to prevent a misapplication of [antitrust] legislation to labor unions, had bestowed upon such unions complete and unreviewable authority to aid business groups to frustrate its primary objective."
Shamefully, the U.S. Department of Labor has been totally AWOL on the job targeting issue even though DOL’s official position is that it violates the Davis Bacon Act. This deliberate enforcement failure has given union bosses a green light to exploit this lucrative and corrupt practice at workers’ and taxpayers’ expense.
In fact, high-level DOL officials — including Secretary Elaine Chao herself — rebuffed direct requests to get involved in this very case which has the potential to mop up billions of dollars in corruption occurring right under DOL’s nose. Even as the seminal case is now breaking the plaintiffs’ way, Bush’s DOL is still sitting on its hands. (Why do these people even bother showing up for work?)
The plaintiffs’ lawsuit is resulting in a major step forward for taxpayers and for high-quality, lower-cost non-union firms and their workers who are effectively blackballed from performing federal contracts, project labor agreements, and other constructions jobs.
SEIU Insider Blows the Whistle on Union’s Dirty PAC Fundraising Scheme
The National Right to Work Foundation’s letters calling for an investigation of the SEIU union’s apparently illegal scheme to coerce "donations" for its Political Action Committee (PAC) prompted this excellent editorial in the Wall Street Journal.
Now that editorial has caused a local union official to blow the whistle in this letter to the editor. Aside from cheering the Foundation’s efforts, her letter alludes to another problematic aspect of the SEIU union’s dirty political fundraising scheme.
Marlene Jones, a registered nurse who is also the head of her Pennsylvania-based SEIU local, writes the following:
I have been a member of the Service Employees International Union (1199P) for 27 years. I am the president of a local nurses union in Pennsylvania. Every day I experience the pressure for our local nurses union to have all of our members contribute to the Political Action Committee fund. SEIU even goes as far as telling its locals that if a percentage of its members contribute, they will receive 1% of their high union dues back to the locals.
[emphasis added]
So on top of the SEIU constitutional amendment penalizing SEIU locals by seizing dues money when they don’t hit PAC fundraising goals, Ms. Jones says top SEIU bosses are promising conditional kickbacks of certain union dues seized from workers and sent to the International affiliate. But those kickbacks apparently do not occur if the local union fails to meet the SEIU’s PAC fundraising mandates. This could be yet another way SEIU bosses are in violating federal law by securing PAC "contributions" with the threat of financial reprisals.
Nurse Jones ends her letter with the following plea:
When will it end? Good luck with the investigation. Our members do not want to contribute to the PAC fund.
Goal of Federally Imposed Police and Firefighter Monopoly Bargaining is More Forced Union Dues
This month’s issue of the Capital Research Center’s Labor Watch newsletter features a cover story on Big Labor’s attempts to force public safety officers nationwide into monopoly union collectives. The article details many unjust aspects of federal monopoly bargaining power grab, not the least of which is that it trumps state laws while stripping employees of their right to negotiate their own terms of employment or be rewarded for their individual merits.
While the National Right to Work Committee continues to lead the fight against the bill’s passage, Foundation attorneys are preparing for a legal challenge if it becomes law. We have previously reported on this overall situation here.
One passage in the Labor Watch piece is particularly noteworthy:
Congressional Quarterly Today reported on May 30 that Sen. Reid still “intends to call up” H.R.980 for a Senate floor vote prior to this fall’s elections. Whether he actually does this may depend on what action is taken by Senate Republicans who oppose the legislation. If they hold firm, Reid will not be able to secure a final floor vote before the November elections without first allowing several right-to-work amendments to be considered and voted on. The most important of these amendments is sponsored by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.). It would repeal all provisions in federal labor law that authorize the firing of employees for refusing to pay dues or “agency” fees to an unwanted union.
A Battle For Forced Dues
[Harry] Reid knows that if a right-to-work amendment like DeMint’s comes up for a vote, union officials will oppose it with all their might, and they will order their Senate supporters to oppose it as well. This will, in turn, demonstrate clearly that Big Labor’s battle for [mandated monopoly bargaining for Public Safety employees] is largely a battle for forced union dues. [emphasis added.]
Union Lawyers Welcome U.S. Solicitor General To Their Legal Team in Locke Supreme Court Case
Yesterday, SCOTUSblog reported on the opposition by National Right to Work Foundation attorneys to the Solicitor General’s self-contradictory motion for divided arguments in the Foundation’s Locke v. Karass Supreme Court case. (For more background on the SG’s unwelcome machinations and the Foundation’s principled opposition, read this post.)
The SCOTUSblog post brings to light this new tidbit of news: "Jeremiah Collins, a lawyer for the respondent, said the union did not plan to file an opposition."
Of course he won’t. The Solicitor General is making Big Labor’s legal arguments. Why not add another lawyer to the union legal team at taxpayer expense?
If the Solicitor General forces his way in, Foundation staff attorneys representing a group of Maine State employees may get 5 fewer minutes to argue their case. Looking at his misguided legal brief (which the union later cited 14 times in its own brief), there can be little doubt that the SG would use the time to make the union officials’ case against the employees and the First Amendment.
As the Foundation attorneys’ response makes clear, the Administration’s interest in the case is extremely tenuous and far fetched, and under court rules it should therefore be barred from participation in oral arguments (as in similar situations in the past).
Welcome to Big Labor’s anti-employee legal team, Mr. Solicitor General. Thank you very little.