On Monday, the
U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in a case that asks whether all
workers in public sector unions, be they members or not, have an obligation to
contribute to the union’s costs to represent them in grievances and at the
bargaining table.
The court has
already ruled that unions have an obligation to represent non-members and that
is not likely to change. It also ruled that non-members have an obligation to
contribute to the costs of representation and bargaining. If the court now
rules in favor of the plaintiffs in Friedrichs vs. California Teachers
Association, the justices would be overturning a nearly 40-year precedent.
Joshua Pechthalt,
president, California Federation of Teachers
California Federation of Teachers California Federation of Teachers
California Federation of Teachers California Federation of Teachers
This may seem like
a technical issue with little impact beyond public employee unions. But the
implications of this decision could be far-reaching. If the court ends “fair
share” union dues, it would hurt our unions’ ability to represent our members
and weaken our ability to improve wages, benefits and working conditions.
For those of us in
education, it could also undercut our ability to improve learning and teaching
conditions by advocating for smaller class sizes, restoring art and music
programs and improving teacher training and evaluation. While non-members do
not contribute to the political program of their unions, the erosion of union
funds will have an impact on our ability to organize in all aspects of union
work.
The most obvious
example is how the labor movement supported Proposition 30 in 2012. Union
support for that historic measure, which raised income taxes on California’s
wealthiest individuals, has generated more than $6 billion a year for education
and ended years of devastating cuts and layoffs. Millions of students have
benefited.
While the
proponents of Friedrichs are arguing the case on freedom of speech grounds, the
wealthy anti-union forces behind this effort understand that a ruling in their
favor will undercut labor’s support for liberal and progressive causes. It is
no secret that unions support many social justice organizations that advocate
for economic fairness, racial equality, women’s rights, voting access, the
environment and many other issues.
This case is also
a broadside against the labor movement more generally. Public sector workers
are the most organized group left within a labor force that is already at the
lowest level of union representation since World War I. While public support
for unions has continued to increase, currently less than 7 percent of all
private sector workers in this country are in a union.
At a time when
American workers are losing ground financially and are profoundly worried about
their future, weakening the voice of public sector unions will not only hurt
the labor movement, it will worsen economic inequality. As we have seen in
other parts of the world, a country in which the wealthy and the corporations
dictate every aspect of life is not a foundation for democracy.
Is that the kind
of society we want?
Joshua Pechthalt
is president of the California Federation of Teachers, an affiliate of the
American Federation of Teachers, which filed a brief supporting the California
Teachers Association in the case. He can be contacted at jpechthalt@cft.org.
Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/opinion/op-ed/soapbox/article53572085.html#storylink=cpy
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