HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A college professor is challenging
the use of her union dues to promote the gubernatorial campaign of Democratic
Gov.-elect Tom Wolf, adding fuel to a simmering legislative debate over dues
deductions from public employees' paychecks.
Mary Trometter, an assistant professor of culinary arts
at the Pennsylvania College of Technology in Williamsport, filed a complaint
Tuesday with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board. She alleges the state's
largest teachers' union violated a law that says union funds cannot be used to
support political candidates.
Trometter objected to a personalized letter sent shortly
before the election to her husband by the Pennsylvania State Education
Association and its affiliate, the National Education Association, urging him
to "join Mary" in voting for Wolf. She said she didn't support Wolf
and never indicated a preference to the union.
The November edition of the PSEA magazine, which featured
numerous pro-Wolf articles, similarly violated the state's Public Employee
Relations Act, she said in her complaint.
Trometter's attorney, David Osborne, said the law is not
being enforced. Through a spokeswoman, the labor board declined to comment on
the case.
PSEA spokesman Wythe Keever said Pennsylvania's campaign
finance laws, which have evolved in response to recent U.S. Supreme Court
rulings, allow unions to privately communicate with members and their families
on any subject.
"We're confident we have legal authority to send the
letter," he said.
But the union apologized for the tone of the letter to
Trometter's husband, and Keever acknowledged that similar letters were sent to
other PSEA members' spouses. He said he did not know how many letters were sent
but that the union had received "a small number of complaints" about
the letter to Trometter.
"We've apologized for the way the letter was worded,
and we've told those members that we won't use this approach again. We regret
that any of our members were offended by this," he said.
The dispute surfaced amid a lull in the legislative
debate over automatic deductions of union dues from public employees' paychecks
and what activities those deductions pay for.
Osborne works for The Fairness Center, a nonprofit law
firm that shares a Harrisburg address with the Commonwealth Foundation, a
libertarian think tank and advocate for "paycheck protection" legislation
to halt the deduction of dues for political activity from public employees'
paychecks. Opposed by organized labor, the business-backed legislation would
limit union deductions to the cost of representing employees.
Source: New
Jersey Herald
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