Monterey Herald

A new try for unionizati­on of legislativ­e staff

- By Dan Walters CalMatters

It's fair to say that Democrats would not have attained their immense majorities in the California Legislatur­e — more than 75% of its 120 members — were it not for money and other resources from the state's labor unions.

In return, Democratic legislator­s have bent over backwards to help unions increase their membership­s and expand members' wages and benefits.

Notable examples are the famous — or infamous — Assembly Bill 5, which tightly restricted employers' use of contract workers, this year's bill to make it easier for the United Farm Workers Union to win representa­tion elections, legislatio­n making child care and home health care workers employees so that they could become union members, and innumerabl­e measures essentiall­y mandating union labor in public and private constructi­on projects.

While the alliance of Democratic politician­s and unions has been a dominant factor in legislativ­e politics for nearly a half century, ever since thenGov. Jerry Brown fostered collective bargaining for state and local government workers, teachers and farm workers in the mid-1970s, there is one notable exception: The Legislatur­e's own employees.

Unionizati­on advocates have made multiple efforts to pass enabling legislatio­n, but all have been sidetracke­d. Generally, state senators have been amenable to having their staffs become union members, but the Assembly has refused.

The final hours of the 2022 session saw the most recent failed attempt. Assemblyma­n Mark Stone, a Scotts Valley Democrat, did a “gut and amend” maneuver, using a bill that had already passed the Assembly and was pending in the Senate as a vehicle. The Senate then passed the revised bill handily, sending it back to the Assembly for a final vote on the last night of the session.

The California Labor Federation, headed by former Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez, who had championed legislativ­e employee unionizati­on while in the Legislatur­e, made Stone's bill a high priority. However, the chairman of the Assembly's Public Employees and Retirement Committee, Jim Cooper, bottled up the measure, denying it a floor vote.

Cooper, a Democrat from Elk Grove, is now gone from the Legislatur­e, having been elected sheriff of Sacramento County. Last month's election also saw a major turnover of legislativ­e membership, thanks to term limits and retirement­s. Advocates of legislativ­e unionizati­on are geared up to take another shot.

As the Legislatur­e reconvened this month for a new biennial session, Tina McKinnor, a newly minted assemblywo­man from Inglewood who was once a legislativ­e staffer, introduced a new version, Assembly Bill 1, with 26 co-authors.

“Legislativ­e staff aren't looking for special treatment. They are looking for the same dignity and respect afforded to all represente­d workers,” McKinnor said.

“We ask our staff to write legislatio­n and staff bills that expand collective bargaining rights for other workers in California, yet we prohibit our own employees from that same right. It is time to stand up for our staff and create a fair, equitable and safe work environmen­t for our hard working and dedicated legislativ­e employees.”

Even those who oppose the pro-union policies of the Legislatur­e should support allowing the Legislatur­e's employees to join a union, as other states have done. It is simply hypocritic­al for a Legislatur­e overwhelmi­ng controlled by Democrats to be so willing to help unions grow their membership­s in other private and public sectors while refusing to allow their own employees to unionize.

If nothing else, unionizati­on of the Capitol would give legislator­s some real world experience in being employers of union members.

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