WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court will consider
limiting the power of government employee unions to collect fees from
non-members in a case that labor officials say could threaten membership and
further weaken union clout.
The justices said Tuesday they will hear an appeal from a
group of California teachers who say it violates their First Amendment rights
to have to pay any fees if they disagree with a union's positions and don't
want to join it.
The teachers want the court to overturn a 38-year-old
legal precedent that said unions can require non-members to pay for bargaining
costs as long as the fees don't go toward political purposes. Public workers in
half the states currently are required to pay "fair share" fees if
they are represented by a union, even if they are not members.
But the high court has raised doubts about the viability
of that regime in two cases over the past four years. The court has stopped
short of overturning the 1977 case, Abood v. Detroit Board of Education case,
but in a 5-4 opinion last year, Justice Samuel Alito called Abood
"questionable on several grounds."
Alito said a "bedrock principle" of the First
Amendment is that "no person in this country may be compelled to subsidize
speech by a third party that he or she does not wish to support."
The lead plaintiff in the case is Rebecca Friedrichs, a
public school teacher in Orange County, California, who says she resigned from
the California Teachers Association because it takes positions that "are
not in the best interests of me or my community." She says she is still
required to pay the union about $650 a year to cover bargaining costs.
The union says the fees are necessary because it has a
legal duty to represent all teachers at the bargaining table, even those who
are not part of the union.
A federal district court ruled against her and the other
challengers, saying the outcome was clear under Abood. The 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals affirmed.
Leaders of some of the nation's largest public sector
unions issued a joint statement calling the lawsuit an effort to weaken labor
rights.
"The Supreme Court is revisiting decisions that have
made it possible for people to stick together for a voice at work and in their
communities - decisions that have stood for more than 35 years," said the
statement from the National Education Association, American Federation of
Teachers, California Teachers Association, American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees and Service Employees International Union.
The Center for Individual Rights, a conservative group
working with the plaintiffs, argues that even basic union goals such as
negotiating pay raises and boosting school budgets can clash with the political
and educational beliefs of many teachers.
"We are seeking the end of compulsory union dues
across the nation on the basis of the free speech rights guaranteed by the
First Amendment," said Terry Pell, the group's president.
The Supreme Court's rationale in 1977 for allowing the
fees was to help promote labor peace and prevent non-members from "free
riding," since the union has a legal duty to represent all workers.
A ruling in favor of the teachers challenging the fees
could sap finances at all unions representing teachers, firefighters and other
government workers, labor leaders and other experts say.
"When unions are required to provide representation,
if people don't have to pay for that, a lot of them are going to opt for that
free option and that's going to cause enormous problems for the viability of
unions," said Benjamin Sachs, a professor at Harvard Law School
specializing in labor law.
As private sector union membership has steadily declined
over the past four decades, unions representing government workers have emerged
as a powerful force in organized labor. But they have come under increasing
attack as officials in Wisconsin and other states blame them for generous
pension and benefit packages that cash-strapped governments no longer can
afford.
Public-sector workers have a union membership rate of
35.7 percent, more than five times higher than that of private-sector workers
at 6.6 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The case, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association,
14-915, will be argued when the Supreme Court begins its new term this fall.
Source: My
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