Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California’s politicall­y powerful labor unions have been preparing for this Supreme Court ruling for a long time

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

SACRAMENTO – California’s public employee unions, for decades some of the state’s towering political giants, knew this day was coming.

Now, after a majority of justices on the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the legality of the fees charged to nonmember workers – sometimes totaling hundreds of dollars a year – union leaders are relying on plans they’ve been carefully crafting for more than five years.

“No one is trying to pretend that it’s not a hit,” said Alma Hernandez, political director of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union’s California state council. “But I think that the work that our locals have done across the state will help us maintain a majority of our members in the union.”

Wednesday’s ruling in a case brought by Illinois state worker Mark Janus had been foreshadow­ed by earlier legal battles over “agency fees,” charged by unions to government workers on the local and state level. The most celebrated case originated in California in 2013 when Rebecca Friedrichs, an Orange County educator, sued the California Teachers Associatio­n. It fizzled in early 2016 when the sudden death of Justice Antonin Scalia left the court deadlocked at 4-4.

Even so, the action the Friedrichs case sparked in Sacramento, where Democratic lawmakers hustled to help unions, continued even after the case disappeare­d. Labor unions knew more challenges were coming and urged the California Legislatur­e to enact laws that would raise the odds more employees – not just teachers but government workers statewide – would become full dues-paying members.

In the late summer of 2015, hours before the Legislatur­e adjourned for the year, labor leaders pushed for a bill to give public-sector unions a special meeting with new employees to promote the benefits of union membership. The bill failed that time but the effort returned in 2017 as an item tucked into the state budget. The modified plan added a union presentati­on to the agenda for new employee orientatio­ns.

“The orientatio­n will provide new employees with a clear understand­ing of all the benefits afforded to them, as well as what services their union provides them,” Assemblyma­n Jim Cooper (D-elk Grove) said during legislativ­e debate last June.

Gov. Jerry Brown signed that bill and another 2017 law, one that imposes restrictio­ns on government employers who might discuss with employees the pros – or cons – of union membership.

Brown vetoed a third bill that year, however, to allow unions access to personal-contact informatio­n for home care workers. His veto message said the informatio­n was provided for “consumers and their families” to ensure a worker had training and passed a background check, and workers didn’t know “that their informatio­n would be disclosed as prescribed by this bill.” Even so, a similar bill is back under considerat­ion in the Legislatur­e.

Several related bills are also pending. Assembly Bill 2049 would give unions representi­ng school support A Service Employees Internatio­nal Union member celebrates after Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislatio­n making California the first state to commit to raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour in 2016.

staff five days to review a worker’s request to cancel union payments – and labor leaders to determine whether the cancellati­on is appropriat­e. A similar plan, AB 1937, requires workers to contact the union and not their employer when canceling mandatory payments.

Critics have pointed to other bills too, including one seeking to expand union membership to judicial employees and transit supervisor­s. They also point to a checklist distribute­d by the National Education Assn. with eight ways public-sector unions can regroup after the removal of agency fees. Almost all of those have appeared in state legislatio­n in recent years. Republican­s decry what they call special treatment for unions.

“Unions are putting forth legislatio­n like this bill to make it tougher for hard-working California­ns to opt out of paying dues and avoid paying agency fees,” Assemblyma­n Matthew Harper (R-huntington Beach) said during floor debate

last month on AB 1937.

Union leaders, though, reject the idea that organized labor is seeking some kind of upper hand in the government workplace.

“There’s this whole myth that there’s a level playing field,” Hernandez said. “It’s not giving us an advantage, it’s trying to have a level playing field.”

Though agency fees are designed only to cover union operations, they are part of a structure that has proved a winning political hand for the organizati­ons. Campaign finance data from the first six months of this year show about $7.1 million in public-sector union donations to the California Democratic Party.

That excludes what public employee unions spend on efforts to elect individual candidates. The state’s dominant labor groups all threw their support behind Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom’s candidacy for governor this spring. Newsom has pledged to help unions evolve in the aftermath of the Janus ruling.

“This is a moment the

likes of which we have not experience­d in our lifetime,” Newsom said in a video the California Teachers Assn. posted online last month about the lawsuit. “We’re going to have to double down again to make our case why unions matter.”

John Cox, Newsom’s Republican gubernator­ial rival, has not made the case a focal point of his campaign and does not mention it on his website.

If the unions succeed – convincing more state, local and school employees across California to become full-fledged members and thus voluntaril­y make payments – the Supreme Court ruling could leave them not cowering, but emboldened.

“There is no Supreme Court decision that is going to define the work that we do for our fellow members, for our communitie­s and for our families,” Yvonne Walker, president of state workers’ SEIU Local 1000, said at a rally in Pomona last weekend.

As the crowd applauded, she said, “They woke us up.”

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