On February 19, 2008 the United States Supreme Court granted a petition for a writ of certiorari filed by National Right to Work Foundation attorneys for a group of twenty Maine state employees objecting to the misuse of their compulsory union dues.
The case, Daniel Locke et al. v. Edward Karass et al., will directly address whether non-union employees can be forced to pay for litigation activities far removed from their workplaces. The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling may provide much-needed clarity to the criteria it had previously established that determine what union activities employees can be lawfully forced to fund.
National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation news releases about Locke:
07/29/13
Raymond J. LaJeunesseRight to Work and Collective Bargaining: Is It Right for You?03/11/13
Raymond J. LaJeunesse
Impact of Right-to-Work Laws
02/13/13
Raymond J. LaJeunesse
Written statement to the U.S. House Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions regarding the National Labor Relations Board's Failure to Fully Enforce Workers' Rights under Communications Workers v. Beck.
07/26/12
Raymond J. LaJeunesse