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This article was published 3 year(s) and 8 month(s) ago

Mark Mix: The forced union dues injustice

The Editors

September 6, 2021 by The Editors

America’s working men and women have faced unprecedented challenges over the course of the pandemic, and on Labor Day we shouldn’t only be remembering their dedication but redoubling our efforts to protect their individual rights in the workplace.

That means there is work to do in Massachusetts, because it is one of the 23 states lacking a Right to Work law in America. In your state, union officials are granted the power to legally threaten a worker to pay up or else be fired.

By imposing a monopoly bargaining contract, all employees in a unionized workplace, even those who reject union membership, can be forced to pay union fees as a condition of employment.

While the landmark 2018 U.S. Supreme Court Janus versus American Federation of State, Country, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) decision now protects all public sector workers from compelled union payments, private sector workers in Massachusetts and other forced-unionism states can still be required to fund union officials’ activities, even if they bitterly oppose the union’s so-called “representation.”

The vast majority of Americans recognize that this is just plain wrong. From year to year, polls consistently show that around eight in 10 Americans reject the idea that someone should be forced to bankroll unwanted union boss activities just to keep his or her job. Similarly, polls have found that even 80 percent of union members believe union membership and dues should be voluntary and not a condition of employment.

In addition to falling short in protecting workers’ rights, forced-unionism states fell painfully behind their Right to Work counterparts in recovering from the economic disruption of COVID-19.

According to Labor Department stats from July, from April 2020 to April 2021, Right to Work states posted a recovery in manufacturing payroll jobs roughly 60 percent stronger by percentage than the one forced-unionism states had during the same time period.

Sluggish job growth in forced-unionism states was not limited to just the pandemic recovery. A National Institute for Labor Relations Research (NILRR) analysis points out that, from 2020 back to 2010, employment in states lacking Right to Work protections increased by only 2.4 percent, paling in comparison to Right to Work states’ 11  percent jump in the same decade.

The NILRR analysis points out that, based on Bureau of Labor Statistics data, the mean after-tax household income in Right to Work states is about $4,300 higher than the average for households in forced-unionism states, after adjusting for cost of living.

Right to Work does nothing to stop workers from affiliating with a union if they choose to voluntarily. In fact, Right to Work presses union bosses to become more accountable, as they know that they can’t depend on government-granted power to keep employee money rolling into their coffers, and that they must instead earn that support by being responsive to their needs.

The working men and women of Massachusetts and America as a whole deserve this kind of protection. So this Labor Day, consider the benefits of Right to Work and demand your elected officials embrace worker freedom and economic opportunity.

Mark Mix is the president of the National Right to Work Committee and National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation.

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