Dayton Daily News

Ohio voters may get say on ‘right to work’

After Indiana OKS law, a group is working to get the issue on Ohio ballot.

- By Thomas Gnau

In the wake of Indiana’s recent passage of a right-to-work law, opposing sides in Ohio are preparing to battle over the same issue.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels earlier this month signed the first rightto-work law to be enacted in the socalled Rust Belt, a stronghold for union-represente­d work forces. The law makes it illegal to force employees to join a union or pay union dues and is similar to laws in 22 other states. Indiana was the first state in a decade to enact such a law.

Some believe the law will give Indiana a competitiv­e advantage in luring businesses to that state. Others don’t believe that.

On Monday, the organizati­on Ohioans for Workplace Freedom said it will gather signatures to place before voters a proposed constituti­onal amendment to “guarantee the freedom of Ohioans to choose whether to participat­e in a labor organizati­on as a condition of employment.”

“We had this debate all last year about workers’ rights and collective bargaining, and voters spoke very clearly.”

James Winship

IUE-CWA 775 president “7 years of evidence and experience ... demonstrat­ed that Indiana did need a right-to-work law to capture jobs.”

Mitch Daniels

Indiana governor

The people behind the drive — which they hope to place before voters this November or November 2013 — are some of the same people who wrote the Ohio health care amendment, Issue 3, that voters overwhelmi­ngly approved last November. Maurice Thompson, an attorney and executive director of the 1851 Center for Constituti­onal Law, crafted the language of both Issue 3 and a proposed amendment that would make Ohio a right-towork state.

“Our polling has always shown that Ohioans want the freedom to choose that other states have always had,” Thompson said Monday.

Other recent polling by the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute showed that more than half of Ohio voters favor passing a right-to-work law.

Ohioans for Workplace Freedom wants to collect the signatures of about 600,000 registered voters in Ohio, said Chris Littleton, a Butler County resident and former president of the conservati­ve Ohio Liberty Council. The organizati­on needs to collect a minimum 386,000 valid signatures, Littleton said.

Last week, the Ohio secretary of state’s office approved the organizati­on as a single-issue political action committee, Littleton said.

The proposal and Indiana’s new law sparked strong reaction among proponents and opponents.

“Seven years of evidence and experience ultimately demonstrat­ed that Indiana did need a right-towork law to capture jobs for which, despite our highly rated business climate, we are not currently being considered,” Daniels said.

Tim Burga, chief of staff of Ohio AFL-CIO, calls the issue “right to work for less.” He contends that right-to-work laws drive wages and benefits lower and do nothing to create new jobs. He cited a recent New York Times article that reported that six of the 10 states with the highest unemployme­nt rates have right-to-work laws.

“We had this debate all last year about workers’ rights and collective bargaining, and voters spoke very clearly,” said Burga, referring to Senate Bill 5, which would have weakened the ability of Ohio publicsect­or unions to collective­ly bargain and which voters overwhelmi­ngly rejected.

Thompson and Littleton reject comparison­s with Senate Bill 5, saying SB 5 and right-to-work laws have nothing to do with each other.

James Winship, president of the Internatio­nal Union of Electronic Workers-communicat­ion Workers of America Local 755 in Dayton, calls right-to-work legislatio­n an attack on unions.

When members stop contributi­ng, unions “crumble,” he said. To counter that, Winship believes younger workers need to be reminded that unions have a history of winning for them benefits, including a 40-hour work week and child-protection labor laws, which they may now take for granted.

Winship also believes Indiana will lose in the long run. Without dues and members, union negotiator­s lose “clout” in workplaces, which ultimately puts pressure on wages and benefits — and tax revenue, he said.

But Warren Davidson, owner of metal stamper West Troy Tool & Machine, sees the issue differentl­y. In the year 2000, about 90 percent of his sales were to customers in Ohio. Last year, his Ohio sales amounted to just 40 to 50 percent of his company’s business. Davidson says he is watching customers move to the southweste­rn states with right-to-work laws. If enough of his customers move, he may have to move as well, he said.

“The customer base is making location decisions,” said Davidson, whose 50-employee shop is not unionized. “And total cost (of a move) is a factor. But labor cost is a very big factor.”

However, Davidson said, Daytonarea companies like his can easily serve customers in Indiana.

Where customers move is an issue as well for Michael van Haaren, president and chief operating officer for Stillwater Technologi­es, a Troy firm that makes tooling for original equipment manufactur­ers like Honda and Chrysler. While Stillwater isn’t unionized, some of van Haaren’s customers are, and he believes those companies are sensitive to the perceived business climate of other states. “Directly, it’s not an impact,” van Haaren said of Indiana’s new law. “But indirectly and long-term, it’s definitely an impact.”

Dennis Mclaughlin, a Middletown-based shareholde­r of business consultant Clark Schaefer and Hackett, works with manufactur­ers, many of them small, family-owned and nonunioniz­ed. Right-to-work provisions don’t often come up in conversati­on with owners of those businesses, Mclaughlin said. Taxes, regulation­s and other issues seem to be more critical to them, he said.

“My personal perception is, this (right to work) is a political issue,” Mclaughlin said.

In 1958, Ohio voters rejected, 63 percent to 37 percent, a right-towork initiative.

Supporters of Indiana’s new law contend that flexibilit­y against mandatory union membership will draw employers to the state. But two professors doubted that will happen.

David Walsh, a Miami University business professor, thinks at best, right-to-work might result in a shift of jobs between states, not the creation of new jobs. “This is not an economic developmen­t story at all,” Walsh said. “This is a political story.”

Marick Masters, director of Wayne State University’s Labor@wayne, an organizati­on that studies union-management matters, said when employers consider where to move or whether to move, they focus on supply chains, work force quality, tax breaks and incentives and “the living preference­s of their executives.”

A spokeswoma­n for Ohio Gov. John Kasich declined to discuss right-to-work legislatio­n in Ohio, but said Kasich is “open to additional strategies” to create jobs.

“Re-creating a jobs-friendly environmen­t is essential to getting Ohio back on track,” Connie Wehrkamp, deputy press secretary for Kasich, said in an email to the Dayton Daily News.

“We’ve successful­ly cut taxes, torn down regulatory barriers to job creation and replaced our antiquated economic developmen­t agency with a new, more effective private sector corporatio­n. These strategies and others are showing good results, and our focus right now is to keep pursuing them. But we’re open to additional strategies as needed.” Contact this reporter at (937) 225-2390 or tgnau@daytondail­ynews.com.

 ??  ?? In early February, Indiana became the first state in more than 10 years to pass a right-to-work law that undermines the ability of unions to organize and collect dues and fees. States with right-to-work laws NOTE: Alaska and Hawaii not to scale
In early February, Indiana became the first state in more than 10 years to pass a right-to-work law that undermines the ability of unions to organize and collect dues and fees. States with right-to-work laws NOTE: Alaska and Hawaii not to scale
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