14 Mar 2006

Washington Employees to Announce Statewide Class-Action Civil Rights Lawsuit Against Union for Having them Fired for Refusal to

Posted in News Releases

Olympia, WA – Wednesday morning, March 15, a group of state employees will hold a press conference to announce the filing of a statewide class-action lawsuit in U.S. District Court seeking to bar Washington Federation of State Employees (WFSE) union officials from violating employees’ due process rights by forcing about 40,000 state employees to pay significant forced union dues – or be fired from their jobs. Many state employees have already been fired for refusal to pay such forced dues.

What: Press conference to announce federal class-action lawsuit
When: 11:00 a.m., Pacific
Wednesday, March 15
Where: Public sidewalk across the street from WFSE union’s state headquarters
1212 Jefferson Street, SW
Olympia, WA 98501
Who: Washington State public employees
National Right to Work Foundation spokesmen
Why: WFSE union officials have already fired several state employees for refusing to pay significant forced union dues. In doing so, union officials have violated workers’ constitutional rights by ignoring certain procedural safeguards set forth under U.S. Supreme Court precedents.

In the event of heavy rain Wednesday morning, or for more information, contact Justin Hakes at (571) 243-3637.

3 Mar 2006

BellSouth, Union Ordered to Stop Forcing Workers to Wear Union Logos as Job Condition

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Washington, DC (March 3, 2006) – Accepting a federal court rebuke of a controversial Clinton-era decision, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) this week ruled that BellSouth Telecommunications employees cannot be forced to wear objectionable union insignia on their work uniforms as a condition of employment. The decision marks the culmination of a five-year legal battle between a group of BellSouth employees, receiving free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, and Communications Workers of America (CWA) union officials.

In January of last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit unanimously overturned an erroneous 2001 NLRB ruling that approved the practice of forcing BellSouth employees to wear union logos on their work uniforms – or be fired from their jobs. After issuing its decision, the court took the rare step of ordering the NLRB to pay attorneys fees, because the agency’s reasoning had not been substantially justified.

Yet, in defiance of the appellate court’s ruling, CWA union officials continued to insist, despite the objections of numerous BellSouth employees, that they wear the union logo as a condition of employment. However, after the court remanded its ruling to the NLRB and instructed the agency to issue an order consistent with the court’s opinion, the NLRB has now ruled that BellSouth and CWA officials must cease and desist from requiring any employees to wear the CWA union logo. BellSouth must also post notices throughout its facilities informing workers of their right not to wear the CWA union logo on their uniforms if they so choose.

“Employees should not be forced to be walking billboards for a union that they do not support,” said Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation. “The CWA union hierarchy’s repeated abuse of employees’ rights in this long ordeal underscores their lack of respect for the law and for the employees they supposedly represent.”

The appellate court noted that there was no evidence that the union patch projected a positive image to customers, and that it could, in fact, signal a negative image to customers who could conclude that strikes and service interruptions were more likely to occur.

Moreover, the court explained that anyone viewing an employee wearing the union logo would reasonably assume that the employee is a formal member of the union. The court ruled that this restrained and coerced employees in the exercise of their right to refrain from formal union membership and union activities.

28 Feb 2006

Employee Advocate Reacts to AFL-CIO’s Pledge to Spend “Unprecedented” Sum on Politics in 2006

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San Diego, CA (February 28, 2006) – The following is a statement of Mark Mix, President of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, in response to AFL-CIO chief John Sweeney’s announcement that the labor conglomerate will spend an “unprecedented” $40 million to influence the 2006 mid-term elections.

“It’s disappointing to learn that the AFL-CIO’s plan for 2006 is ‘more of the same.’ Rather than getting workers to join unions voluntarily, union officials have stepped up their assault on employees’ legal rights to say ‘no’ to unionization.

“The AFL-CIO’s top priority appears to be electing politicians who pledge support for granting union organizers sweeping new coercive privileges under federal law– namely the Kennedy-Miller bill.

“At the same time, the AFL-CIO elite is expected to announce later this week that it will divert significant additional resources into corporate campaigns and other Top Down organizing methods. These abusive tactics involve attacking companies until they agree to hand over their employees into forced unionism through the so-called “card check” method rather than utilizing the traditional, less-abusive election procedure.

“Rather than working to expand their political clout and coercive organizing, union officials should instead clean up the corruption, shun the radical political activism, and turn their energy to improving the product they’re attempting to sell to America’s hardworking men and women.”

To schedule an interview with a Right to Work spokesperson, call Justin Hakes at 703-770-3317.

24 Feb 2006

Facing Embarrassing Loss in Employee Election to Throw Out Union, SEIU Officials Abandon Head Start

Posted in News Releases

Ashtabula, OH (February 24, 2006) – Facing intense employee opposition to their monopoly bargaining status, Service Employees International Union (SEIU) District 1199 officials this week abandoned all claims to represent workers at Ashtabula County Community Head Start.

Union officials informed the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) yesterday that they no longer wished to represent employees at Head Start after battling an employee revolt for more than a year. The SEIU’s abandonment of Head Start comes in response to an employee-requested decertification election – which would have been held today – to throw out the unpopular union.

With free legal aid from the National Right to Work Foundation, Peggy Swartzfager filed the decertification petition, signed by over 75 percent of her coworkers, in early 2005 after SEIU officials had failed for more than a year to obtain a collective bargaining agreement with Head Start. To thwart the election, union officials scrambled to reach a final agreement and filed two unfair labor practice charges against the employer. The contract was not favored by many rank-and-file workers, particularly since it included a requirement that all employees pay union dues or be fired from their jobs.

SEIU officials filed the unfair labor practice charges against Head Start in an effort to exploit NLRB procedures to obtain an indefinite postponement of the decertification election. Notwithstanding these postponement tactics, the NLRB scheduled an election for the workers for February 24.

To avoid a public relations black eye, SEIU officials disclaimed their monopoly bargaining contract before Head Start employees voted out the unwanted union, granting approximately 40 workers freedom to negotiate their own terms and conditions of employment – and earn rewards based on individual merit.

“SEIU officials tucked tail and ran knowing that Head Start workers were going to vote them out,” said Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation. “About to lose thousands of dollars in compulsory union dues, union officials packed up and left before these workers handed them an embarrassing election defeat.”

Under the National Labor Relations Act, if 30 percent or more of the employees in a bargaining unit sign a decertification petition, the NLRB should conduct a secret ballot election to determine if a majority of the employees wish to decertify the union and stop it from any further monopoly bargaining activities.

7 Feb 2006

Labor Board Strikes Down Teamsters’ Discipline, Dues Collections, and Threats Against UPS Workers Who Worked During 1997 Strike

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Albuquerque, N.M. (February 7, 2006) – The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in Washington, D.C., has ruled that Teamsters union officials violated workers’ rights by retaliating against workers who chose to do their jobs during the national strike against United Parcel Service (UPS) in 1997. The ruling ensures that UPS drivers in New Mexico may resign retroactively from the union and receive significant rebates of forced union dues.

A group of eight UPS workers from New Mexico, with free help from the National Right to Work Foundation, triggered the NLRB’s prosecution of the Teamsters union after union officials brought internal union disciplinary action against employees, including the threat of fines for working during a strike and firings from their jobs for refusal to pay full union dues and duplicative “initiation fees.”

The NLRB decision in the long-languishing case determined that Teamsters Union Local 492 violated federal labor law because union officials never informed workers of their right to resign their formal union membership and withhold certain forced dues spent on activities unrelated to collective bargaining. The NLRB also ruled that those employees who did not receive the requisite notices could not be considered voluntary members of the union and, therefore, could not be subjected to internal union discipline of any kind.

“Teamsters union officials waged an ugly and illegal campaign of retaliation against workers who decided to honor their commitments to their families and their employer by refusing to walk off the job,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “This long overdue ruling vindicates the principled and courageous stand taken by these workers.”

When Teamsters officials ordered UPS workers to strike against the company, some workers discovered on their own that they had a right to resign their formal union memberships in order to continue working during the strike without facing union retaliation. The NLRB found that, not only did Teamsters officials refuse to immediately honor the workers’ resignations as the law requires, but continued illegally to collect full dues, attempted to collect duplicate “initiation fees,” and sought to fine and cause the firing of workers who had refused to walk off the job.

In its ruling, the NLRB ordered Teamsters officials to end all threats of discipline against the workers, retroactively honor the workers’ resignations from union membership, and inform other workers in the statewide bargaining unit of their right to resign their formal union membership. Any employee who exercises that right may also be retroactively reimbursed for any forced union dues seized for purposes other than collective bargaining.

The ruling also implies that similar NLRB prosecutions, such as that of the Teamsters union for workers’ rights abuses during the 2003 California statewide grocery strike, will be resolved in favor of the employees.

The actions of Teamsters union officials violated protections recognized in the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Communications Workers v. Beck, a case argued and won by Foundation attorneys. Under Beck and related rulings, workers may resign their formal union memberships at any time, and may not be compelled to pay dues beyond the union’s proven collective bargaining costs.

3 Feb 2006

Teacher Union Lawyers Lose Last-Ditch Effort to Block Full Investigation over Use of Union Dues for Politics

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Knoxville, TN (February 3, 2006) – In a significant procedural victory, the Supreme Court of Tennessee has cleared the way for a circuit court trial in a case in which a Tennessee teacher is asserting that full union members have the right to withhold union dues spent on ideological activity without losing their right to vote on the collective bargaining agreements that bind them.

With free legal assistance from National Right to Work Foundation attorneys, Dewey Esquinance filed suit against the Polk County Education Association (PCEA) and Tennessee Education Association (TEA) unions, affiliates of the National Education Association (NEA), in April 2003 in the Circuit Court of Polk County. After the Court of Appeals of Tennessee agreed with arguments made by Foundation attorneys that the trial court improperly dismissed the lawsuit, the state’s highest court rejected a union petition for review – clearing the way for a full investigation and trial.

As a result, Esquinance will be able to make his case in the Tennessee Circuit Court of Polk County that teachers statewide have the constitutional right to remain full union members and withhold dues spent on union political activities with which they disagree.

Union officials currently require teachers to exercise their rights under Tennessee’s Right to Work law to resign from union membership in order to stop the use of their dues money for objectionable political activities. In doing so, however, those teachers are barred by union officials from voting on ratification of collective bargaining agreements that determine the terms of their employment, control sick bank donations, and affect access to teacher training.

“This ruling shuts down teacher union officials’ desperate, last-ditch attempt to prevent a full investigation into their practice of spending teachers’ dues on politics,” said Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation.

In September 2002, Esquinance joined the PCEA union and began paying full union dues, even though he objected to the NEA union’s political agenda. When Esquinance notified union officials that he wanted to remain a full union member but only pay for union expenses related to collective bargaining, union officials informed him that his union membership was terminated and that there was no appeals process.

Like many educators, Esquinance objects to numerous aspects of the union’s agenda for religious and political reasons, including the NEA’s stances promoting abortion, gun control, and special rights for homosexuals. Every year, the NEA and its affiliates spend tens of millions of dollars in compulsory dues in support of political views and candidates that many teachers find objectionable.

Esquinance is challenging union membership dues based on the rights established by the Foundation-won U.S. Supreme Court decision in Abood v. Detroit Board of Education. Under Abood and subsequent rulings, employees have a constitutional right to refuse to pay for union non-collective bargaining activities, such as politics.

31 Jan 2006

Printpack Employees Hit Union with Federal Charges for Illegal Union Dues Seizures

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Greensburg, IN (January 31, 2006) – With free legal aid from National Right to Work Foundation attorneys, nine Printpack workers filed federal charges today against the Graphic Communications Conference (GCC) union, a Teamsters union subsidiary, for illegally collecting forced union dues.

The employees filed the charges with the National Labor Relations Board (NRLB) on behalf of themselves and nearly 270 of their colleagues at the packaging materials plant. The NLRB’s investigators will decide whether formally to prosecute GCC union officials for unfair labor practices.

From January 2005 to June 2005, the monopoly bargaining contract between the GCC union and Printpack was temporarily not in effect. But starting December 2005, GCC union officials began to retroactively charge Printpack workers for forced union dues during the contract hiatus – even though they had no legal authority to do so for that period.

Because Indiana is not yet a Right to Work state, employees can be fired from their jobs simply for refusing to pay union dues when a collective bargaining agreement is in effect. However, according to longstanding NLRB precedent, the National Labor Relations Act prevents union officials from collecting forced dues from employees when the union has no contract with the employer.

“GCC union bosses seem more interested in collecting forced union dues money so they can play politics than representing employees at the bargaining table,” said Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation. “The absence of a Right to Work law in Indiana allows this kind of union corruption and abuse.”

Additionally, GCC union officials deliberately failed to inform employees of their right to refrain from formal union membership and pay reduced compulsory union dues. These union actions violate employees’ rights affirmed under the Foundation-won U.S. Supreme Court Communications Workers v. Beck decision. Under Beck and subsequent NLRB rulings, union officials must inform employees of their right to refrain from formal union membership and allow them to reclaim forced dues spent for activities unrelated to collective bargaining, such as union political activity.

Foundation attorneys also point out that GCC union officials are charging Printpack employees who file Beck objections for compulsory dues greater than their collective bargaining share, and are illegally collecting dues directly from employees’ paychecks without first providing the workers with information about union expenditures – preconditions to collecting forced union dues.

31 Jan 2006

Charlotte-Area Autoworker Files Federal Charges After Facing Retaliation for Questioning Special Treatment for Union Reps

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Charlotte, NC (January 31, 2006) – A local autoworker today filed federal unfair labor practice charges against the United Auto Workers (UAW) union and Daimler-Chrysler subsidiary Freightliner LLC after she suffered retaliation for questioning a pattern of special treatment given to union officials.

The unfair labor practice charges come on the heels of a class-action federal racketeering complaint filed by employees in U.S. District Court last week seeking significant damages after Freightliner and UAW union officials had already been found to be in illegal collusion by federal labor board investigators.

Kristi Jones, a Freightliner employee at the company’s Gastonia facility, sought free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation to file today’s charges with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) after she was suspended, demoted, and stripped of her leadership position.

Union and company officials retaliated against Jones in response to an email she sent in December 2005 that simply questioned whether a new work rule applied to UAW union officials, as well as nonunion workers. The new work rule specified that workers on the facility floor must wear safety glasses with clear lenses. Jones sought a clarification of how the new rule would be enforced because of an ongoing pattern of special treatment for union officials – including the exemption of union stewards from 10-minute team “huddle meetings” and from a requirement that workers sign in when working overtime.

Jones’ charges allege that the UAW union local and national affiliates and the company are maintaining a work environment where even implicit criticism of union officials is met with harsh and unlawful disciplinary action. Aside from violating the National Labor Relations Act, such actions also run contrary to the spirit of North Carolina’s highly popular Right to Work law, on the books since 1947, which prohibits the forcing of workers to join or pay dues to a union as a job condition.

“Freightliner and UAW officials have cut an illegal sweetheart deal and should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” said Stefan Gleason, Foundation Vice President. “This illegal intimidation, retaliation, and harassment must end.”

Jones filed her charges just days after she and four other autoworkers from three major facilities in North Carolina, including the Gastonia facility, filed a class-action federal racketeering lawsuit against the UAW union and Freightliner, also with help from the National Right to Work Foundation. That complaint outlines a secret quid pro quo arrangement between Freightliner and the UAW in which union officials agreed in advance to significant concessions at the expense of Freightliner’s workers at its non-union facilities in North Carolina in exchange for valuable company assistance in organizing those workers.

The NLRB will now investigate Jones’ charges and decide whether to issue a formal complaint and prosecute the company and union.

27 Jan 2006

Federal Charges Force Union Officials to Respect City Employee’s Religious Beliefs

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Lynnwood, WA (January 27, 2006) – To avoid costly and embarrassing federal court litigation for religious discrimination, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 3035 union officials begrudgingly agreed to honor the right of a City of Lynwood employee to have his monthly union fees re-directed to charity because supporting the union violates his sincere religious convictions.

With free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, Paul Coffelt, a civil engineer with the City of Lynwood, filed religious discrimination charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in August, 2005, against the AFSCME union and the city for forcing him to pay dues to the union to keep his job. As a Mormon, Coffelt finds that the manner in which the union deals with his employer is inconsistent with his religious beliefs.

Coffelt filed the religious discrimination charges because, after communicating his objection to the collection of forced dues to the union and the city in February, 2005, AFSCME union officials and his employer failed to provide him with proper accommodation. The settlement, which was recently brokered by the EEOC, confirms Coffelt’s right to re-direct all future forced union dues to a mutually agreed-upon charity. In addition, the estimated $700 in AFSCME forced union dues that were deducted from Coffelt’s paychecks since the date of his objection will also be forwarded to charity.

«It’s outrageous for union bosses to demand that a government employee put allegiance to a radical union hierarchy ahead of his religious faith,» said Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation. «This settlement highlights AFSCME union officials’ general lack of respect for independent-minded workers.»

Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, union officials may not force any employee to financially support a union if doing so violates the employee’s sincerely held religious beliefs. To avoid the conflict between an employee’s faith and a requirement to pay fees to a union he or she believes to be immoral, the law requires union officials to accommodate the employee – most often by designating a mutually acceptable charity to accept the funds.

Coffelt has chosen to re-direct his forced union dues to the United Way of Snohomish County.

24 Jan 2006

Freightliner/Daimler-Chrysler and UAW Face Federal Racketeering Suit for Backroom Sweetheart Deal to Force Workers into Union Ra

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Press Conference Rebroadcast time: 2:00 p.m. and 2:30 p.m., EST
KU Satellite SBS6, Transponder 9, (Master Station Phone 972-293-9500)

Detroit, Mich. (January 24, 2006) – With free legal aid from the National Right to Work Foundation, five autoworkers from three major facilities today filed a class-action federal racketeering lawsuit against the United Auto Workers (UAW) union and Daimler-Chrysler subsidiary Freightliner LLC. The workers announced the lawsuit this morning at a press conference outside of UAW headquarters in Detroit and allege an illegal scheme to install a “company union” and repeated violations of workers’ rights.

Filed in the U.S District Court for the Western District of North Carolina under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Practice Act (RICO), the lawsuit alleges a pattern of violations of longstanding federal law that bars employers from delivering “things of value” to unions. The RICO statutes are used to prosecute criminal enterprises, e.g., organized crime, gang activities, and union corruption.

The complaint outlines a secret quid pro quo arrangement between Freightliner and the UAW in which union officials agreed in advance to significant concessions at the expense of the Freightliner workers at its non-union facilities in North Carolina in exchange for valuable company assistance in organizing those workers.

Specifically, Freightliner and the UAW union expressly agreed to limitations on wages, cancellation of an employee profit sharing bonus, an increase in the health care costs shouldered by employees, and other concessions. These actions effectively handed certain control of the union over to the company. UAW officials outlined their lengthy list of concessions in a once-secret document titled “Preconditions to Card Check Procedure.” In a related case, the National Labor Relations Board’s General Counsel already found the preconditions to be illegal.

In return, Freightliner agreed to provide valuable organizing assistance outlined in a document titled “Card Check Procedure,” including holding compulsory “captive audience” meetings on company time during which union organizers could propagandize employees, granting wide access to unsuspecting employees, and not making any negative comments about unionization. Freightliner also denied employees secret ballot elections when choosing whether to unionize. The “Card Check Procedure” required Freightliner to automatically recognize the union when organizers present the requisite number of signed authorization cards. In such “top down” organizing drives, employees are frequently coerced or misled into signing such “authorization” cards, which are then counted as “votes” in favor of unionization. Workers have also complained that signed cards are difficult to revoke.

“To get help in coercing thousands of workers into union ranks and to obtain at least $1 million in annual dues revenues, UAW officials sold out the very workers they sought to represent,” said National Right to Work Foundation Vice President Stefan Gleason. “It takes tremendous courage for workers to stand up to pressure from both their employer and the union brass, and the National Right to Work Foundation is proud to stand with them.”

The suit lists four counts of RICO violations regarding the enforcement of these corrupt arrangements against the employees of certain Freightliner facilities. The employees seek financial restitution to all employees at the Mount Holly, Gastonia, and Cleveland, North Carolina, facilities in the form of treble damages for all dues seized and earnings lost as a result of the unlawful pact. Additional Freightliner plants known to be covered by the secret agreement are located in High Point, North Carolina, and Gaffney, South Carolina.