The gross Supreme Court
issued another gross ruling today.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on
Wednesday dealt a major blow to organized labor. By a 5-to-4 vote, with
the more conservative justices in the majority, the court ruled that
government workers who choose not to join unions may not be required to
help pay for collective bargaining.
The ruling
means that public-sector unions across the nation, already under
political pressure, could lose tens of millions of dollars and see their
effectiveness diminished.
The plaintiff in this case was a child support specialist from Illinois named Mark Janus.
He has a job right now thanks to a union he doesn't want to join.
A drastic provision in the state’s “last, best, and final offer” in
2016 would have given Governor Rauner the right to outsource and
privatize state employees’ jobs without accountability. Our union is all
that’s preventing critical public services from being privatized.
Our agency would be at particular risk, because Illinois already has a
longstanding contract with a scandal-ridden, for-profit corporation
called Maximus to perform some of our agency’s functions. They modify
child support orders and interact with employers about income
withholding—pretty simple tasks, yet state employees regularly have to
correct their work. If they were to take over more complex tasks, we can
imagine how badly that would go! Their concern is for profit, not kids.
If the governor could get away with it, it’s very likely he would
expand the Maximus contract to privatize jobs like mine and Mr. Janus’s.
He already did something similar to nurses in the prison system. But
our union has to be consulted before the state can outsource anything.
And when they do outsource, we monitor the contract and discuss how long
it will continue. I go to those meetings for our union. Right now,
instead of letting management expand its deal with Maximus, we’ve been
pressing to cut that contract.
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