WASHINGTON (AP) — Powerful public-sector unions are facing
another high-profile legal challenge that they say could wipe away millions
from their bank accounts and make it tougher to survive.
A group of California schoolteachers, backed by a
conservative group, wants the Supreme Court to rule that unions representing
government workers can't collect fees from those who choose not to join.
Half the states currently require state workers
represented by a union to pay "fair share" fees covering bargaining
costs, even if they are not members. The justices could decide as soon as next
week whether to take the case.
Union opponents say it violates the First Amendment to
require fees from nonmembers that may go to causes they don't support. They
want the high court to overturn a 38-year-old precedent allowing the fees.
Source: Press
of Atlantic City
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