Santa Fe New Mexican

Worker bills die in Senate

Measures, voted down along party lines, sought to ban compulsory union fees for employees

- By Milan Simonich The New Mexican

Two bills that New Mexico Republican­s call their “right-to-work” package are probably dead after a Senate panel blocked them Tuesday night.

The Senate Public Affairs Committee voted 5-3 to table both measures. All five Democrats on the panel opposed the bills, and the three Republican­s supported them.

Each bill sought to outlaw compulsory fees if a worker chooses not to belong to a union. Some unions in New Mexico, as part of negotiated contracts, now charge what they call “fair share” fees because those who are not union members still get the raises and benefits that are negotiated for dues-paying members.

Rep. Dennis Roch, R-Logan, and Sen. Bill Sharer, R-Farmington, brought the bills to prohibit the fees, saying they violate free choice and the fundamenta­l right not to a associate with a union.

Roch also attached to his bill a second, unrelated proposal that would have raised the statewide minimum wage to $8, an increase of 50 cents.

His bill drew much of the Demo- crats’ ire.

Sen. Jacob Candelaria, D-Albuquerqu­e, said House Republican­s have inaccurate­ly charged throughout the legislativ­e session that Democrats are using Washington-style politics.

Candelaria said Roch’s bill containing a rider on the minimum wage exemplifie­d the deceptive Washington politics that Republican­s say they oppose.

Roch’s bill, containing two vastly different laws under one heading, would be thrown out as unconstitu­tional even if it cleared the Legislatur­e, Candelaria said.

“This issue is a cloud of political rhetoric searching for solid ground,” he said.

Roch, in a statement after his bill was defeated, called the Senate panel’s vote “a sad day for New Mexico’s workers.”

“It’s extremely disappoint­ing that the Democrat-controlled Senate would choose obstructio­n over a common-sense compromise that would raise the minimum wage and give our workers the freedom to choose whether they financiall­y contribute to a union,” Roch said.

Sharer’s bill does not call for an increase in the minimum wage, but it also proposed to ban “fair share” fees charged by some unions.

Republican­s on the committee said they liked both bills because they might make New Mexico more attractive to businesses looking for plant sites.

“I want all of you to know that I think this is a step in the right direction,” said Sen. Ron Griggs, R-Alamogordo.

Sen. Mimi Stewart, D-Albuquerqu­e, countered that socalled right-to-work laws are bad for the economy, and especially for the middle class.

“Unions create higher wages,” Stewart said. “Unions create better working conditions.”

She also said that many work- ers in New Mexico, notably teachers, receive the raises and benefits negotiated by a union, even if though they do not pay any dues or fees.

Stewart said these workers reap the benefits of the union’s efforts and expenses without paying a penny. She said that private organizati­ons, such as the Greater Albuquerqu­e Chamber of Commerce, charge membership fees, and they don’t provide any services for free.

Republican Sen. Gay Kernan of Hobbs focused her argument for the bills on the possibilit­y of an improved economy if the bills were approved.

She asked Roch about Western states with “right-to-work” laws, and he said they had seen 12 percent growth while New Mexico recently had lost population.

Stewart offered statistics that contradict­ed Roch. She said wages are depressed in right-towork states as unions are broken. Because the bills did not advance from the Senate committee, they probably cannot be revived until next year. Senate Republican­s already have tried but failed to move Roch’s bill to the full 42-member Senate. That maneuver failed 25-17 on a straight, party-line vote.

 ?? PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? Bob Eichhorst of Corrales, left, a member of Local 412 Plumbers & Pipe Fitters, holds a thank you sign to the Senate Public Affairs Committee after it tabled a ‘right to work’ bill Tuesday.
PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN Bob Eichhorst of Corrales, left, a member of Local 412 Plumbers & Pipe Fitters, holds a thank you sign to the Senate Public Affairs Committee after it tabled a ‘right to work’ bill Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Republican Sen. Bill Sharer, left, and Rep. Dennis Roch, sponsors of the so-called ‘right-to-work’ legislatio­n, listen to feedback by the Senate Public Affairs Committee before the bill was tabled Tuesday.
Republican Sen. Bill Sharer, left, and Rep. Dennis Roch, sponsors of the so-called ‘right-to-work’ legislatio­n, listen to feedback by the Senate Public Affairs Committee before the bill was tabled Tuesday.
 ?? LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? Sen. Daniel A. Ivey-Soto, D-Albuquerqu­e, speaks in opposition to House Bill 75 on Tuesday.
LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN Sen. Daniel A. Ivey-Soto, D-Albuquerqu­e, speaks in opposition to House Bill 75 on Tuesday.

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