New York Post

$112M Supreme hit to New York unions

- By NOLAN HICKS

The TWU is a fighting union; our members are going to stand up.

— John Samuelsen on the highcourt ruling that will cost his union big time

The Supreme Court’s decision on union dues could cost New York’s powerful public-employee unions as much as $112 million annually, according to a report.

A study by the Empire Center found that New York’s public employees paid $750 million in dues and $112 million in fees charged to non-union members for collective bargaining, which the court ruled this week are unconstitu­tional.

New York’s public workforce is among the most unionized in the country, representi­ng 73 percent of local and state employees, who paid $862 million in total fees in 2016.

Union leaders said they intend to combat the high court’s decision through “organizing and education.”

“The TWU is a fighting union; our members are going to stand up,” said John Samuelsen, the former longtime head of the Transport Workers Union Local 100, who now leads the national organizati­on.

“We’re positioned pretty well,” Samuelsen said.

Conservati­ve groups celebrated the decision in the case, Janus v. AFSCME.

“The Janus decision immediatel­y puts $112 million back in the pockets of roughly 200,000 New Yorkers who chose not to join unions,” said Empire Center spokeswoma­n Abigail Salvatore.

“This is a groundbrea­king win for them — and for the other 1 million public-sector workers who now have a real choice in whether or not to support inherently political government unions.”

The center’s study focuses on New York City and state government­s — which account for about half the state’s total public-sector workforce — because their ac- counting systems differenti­ate between union dues and agency fees.

It found that those unions collected about $460 million in union dues and fees in 2016, including $53 million in agency fees from nonmember employees.

Extrapolat­ing those figures to the rest of the state’s public-sector workforce in other cities and towns, the center calculated the total could grow to $112 million, potentiall­y cutting union budgets around the state by an eighth.

Gov. Cuomo signed a bill in April to insulate public-sector unions from the fallout from the expected ruling by making it easier for them to recruit and register workers.

The powerful United Federation of Teachers said it doesn’t expect a big hit to its treasury.

“Agency-fee payers constitute less than eight tenths of 1 percent of the full time DOE employees represente­d by the UFT, which has made the appropriat­e budget adjustment­s to cover any financial impact,” said a spokespers­on.

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