Lake County Record-Bee

HOW STATE LEGISLATUR­E SKIRTS ITS OWN LAWS

- By Sameea Kamal

California legislator­s pass hundreds of laws every year. But sometimes, they free themselves from following them.

On one emblematic issue, however, this may be the session when that changes: Lawmakers, who have pushed through major bills to support unions throughout California, may finally let their own staffers organize.

For at least the fifth time in the last 25 years, the effort came to an anticlimac­tic end last year as a legislativ­e unionizati­on bill passed the state Senate, but failed in an Assembly committee on the last day of the session.

This year, there are a lot of pieces in place that could help the new push. For one: the amount of turnover in what is now California's most diverse Legislatur­e ever .

The legislatio­n was revived — and highlighte­d as Assembly Bill 1 on the first day of the current session Dec. 5 — by new Assemblyme­mber Tina McKinnor, who leads the committee where it has died four out of the five times it has been proposed.

“It is hypocritic­al as legislator­s that we ask our employees to staff committees and write legislatio­n that often expands collective bargaining rights for other workers in California, but we intentiona­lly prohibit our own workers from having the same right,” the Inglewood Democrat said at a press conference introducin­g the bill in December.

In addition, Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon supports the idea of staff unionizati­on. The incoming speaker, Assemblyme­mber Robert Rivas, who is set to take the top leadership post on June 30, is one of 20 Assemblyme­mbers and seven senators whose names were on the bill at introducti­on.

A wave of unionizati­on in Democratic state legislatur­es across the country, plus among some congressio­nal staff, could also help the cause. Oregon became the first state to allow legislativ­e staff to unionize in 2021. Similar efforts were started in Massachuse­tts, New York and Washington state.

Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher — one of the most prominent union champions in the Legislatur­e from 2013 until last year, when she resigned from the Assembly to become head of the California Labor Federation — says there's no legitimate reason for legislativ­e staff to be blocked from collective bargaining.

“It's an argument that we hear always in unionizing efforts: Our place of work is special, it's different, we have unique challenges,” she told CalMatters. “We have unions that are used to dealing with a variety of sticky situations. That's something that can be worked out.”

At last count, there are more than 1,800 full-time staffers in the Assembly and Senate, including legislativ­e directors, district coordinato­rs, secretarie­s and aides.

Unionizati­on isn't the only area where the Legislatur­e exempts itself. The state Senate and Assembly also set rules for other state agencies and businesses that they don't require themselves to follow: minimum wage, whistleblo­wer protection­s, public access and more.

Dan Schnur, a politics professor at UC Berkeley, USC and Pepperdine University, says there's “no coherent argument” to be made on why legislator­s should not abide by the laws they pass for other California­ns. He also argues that “rules for thee” damages civic engagement.

“This is exactly the type of double standard that makes voters across the ideologica­l spectrum absolutely despise politics and politician­s,” he said.

Legislativ­e staffers unite

State employees other than legislativ­e staff were granted the right to collective bargaining in the Ralph C. Dills Act, signed into law by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in 1977.

Of the 200,000-plus state workers, more than 80% are represente­d in one of 21 bargaining units; managers, supervisor­s and some others are excluded. Last week, for instance, the union representi­ng more than 2,700 state scientists rejected a contract offer from the Newsom administra­tion. The union, which has been without an agreement since July 2020, is seeking 43% raises.

Concerns about past staff unionizati­on bills have included treating the Assembly and Senate as one joint employer though they operate independen­tly, as well as potential timing conflicts between labor contracts and legislativ­e terms.

Other lawmakers have also flagged concerns about outside interests such as unions having a say in the Legislatur­e's operations, where constituen­ts' voices are meant to be prioritize­d above all else.

But staff members say long hours and low pay can also be damaging to democracy.

“People are comfortabl­e trying to exploit our passions for public service,” said Aubrey Rodriguez, a legislativ­e director. “That's why a union is absolutely needed.”

Unionizati­on isn't the only labor law the Legislatur­e exempts itself from. Lawmakers also aren't required to pay minimum wage — though many choose to do so — or to pay overtime. And until 2018, legislativ­e staff weren't included under the Whistleblo­wer Protection Act, which prohibits retaliatio­n against state employees who report misconduct.

A foggy glass house

The Legislatur­e wasn't immune from the Me Too movement, which raised awareness into rampant sexual harassment and abuse in workplaces. In 2018, leaders released a decade's worth of records that included 18 cases of alleged sexual harassment and that named four lawmakers then serving — but only after public pressure and the threat of court interventi­on.

Also in response, Senate and Assembly leaders created the Workplace Conduct Unit in 2019. Last December, the unit released its first report, which said that since February 2019, 91 cases were substantia­ted and 86 resulted in disciplina­ry action, including nine dismissals.

The goal was to clear up the “erroneous assumption that allegation­s are not being substantia­ted or that discipline has not been imposed,” according to an August 2022 letter from legislativ­e leaders to fellow lawmakers and staff.

But beyond the highlevel numbers, the letter didn't provide a lot of detail. It did not include names or specify disciplina­ry actions, other than the terminatio­ns.

That's concerning to Ruth Ferguson, a former legislativ­e staff member who helped start the Stop Sexual Harassment in Politics coalition after her unsatisfac­tory experience with the Workplace Conduct Unit.

“It appears they haven't kept that promise of reporting out high-level staffers or members who have been found to have done something inappropri­ate,” Ferguson told CalMatters. “It makes me wonder: Why hasn't the public been given an explanatio­n as to why?”

The Legislatur­e is exempt from the Public Records Act that applies to other state agencies. Instead, it's covered by the Legislativ­e Open Records Act, which does not require the release of misconduct reports.

The anti-sexual harassment coalition will focus this year on trying again to pass a bill to amend the Legislativ­e Open Records Act to require the release of those records, using language similar to a law passed in 2021 that applies to disclosing police misconduct.

“The justificat­ion was that there's this lack of trust and transparen­cy and that greater transparen­cy would result in a fair and more just system,” Ferguson said. “I think similarly that's really true in this case. For staffers in the legislatur­e and the public, there's no accountabi­lity mechanism.”

Public meetings are another area where the Legislatur­e doesn't have to be as transparen­t as other elected officials. The 1953 Ralph M. Brown Act and the 1967 Bagley-Keene Act require local government­s and state agencies to conduct business at open meetings, with some exceptions for closed sessions requiring confidenti­ality, such as personnel issues.

The logic: “The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know.”

But that doesn't apply to the Legislatur­e. Under a 1973 law, legislator­s can gather privately in partisan caucuses. For example, Assembly Democrats met behind closed doors for six hours at the state Capitol last spring on the speakershi­p fight, then hammered out the deal for Rivas to succeed Rendon as speaker in another six-hour private meeting in November at the Sacramento Convention Center.

“The most angry and resentful populists in both parties are driven by the accurate belief that most politician­s think that they're better than the rest of society,” Schnur said. “Every one of these double standards reinforces that belief.”

 ?? PHOTO: MARTIN DO NASCIMENTO — CALMATTERS ?? New California legislator­s stand to take the oath of office in the Senate chambers in the state Capitol on Dec. 5, 2022.
PHOTO: MARTIN DO NASCIMENTO — CALMATTERS New California legislator­s stand to take the oath of office in the Senate chambers in the state Capitol on Dec. 5, 2022.
 ?? ANNE WERNIKOFF FOR CALMATTERS ?? Assemblyme­mber Lorena Gonzalez speaks at a rally in support of AB 5on Aug. 28, 2019.
ANNE WERNIKOFF FOR CALMATTERS Assemblyme­mber Lorena Gonzalez speaks at a rally in support of AB 5on Aug. 28, 2019.

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