Freedom Foundation Vows Suit if DOC Contract Substitutes Union Loyalty for Seniority

Freedom Foundation Vows Suit if DOC Contract Substitutes Union Loyalty for Seniority
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Freedom Foundation Vows Suit if DOC Contract Substitutes Union Loyalty for Seniority

(SALEM, Ore.) —AFSCME 75’s plan to reward union loyalty rather than workplace seniority for Oregon State Corrections workers is both illegal and unconstitutional, and the Freedom Foundation is poised to take legal action if union officials sign a collective bargaining agreement with these provisions.

Earlier this year, AFSCME 75 began circulating a “survey” to its members in which one of the questions asked whether they would be in favor of these perks being handed out not according to actual seniority but instead to those most demonstrably supportive of the union.

Specifically, every employee who is also a union member would be entitled to first pick of benefits such as holidays and vacation time before the first nonmember — irrespective of either’s years of service.

Last week, AFSCME 75 representatives put these new “seniority-based-on-membership” provisions into the new Collective Bargaining Agreement it is negotiating with the Department of Corrections.

The Freedom Foundation, a West Coast-based nonprofit policy organization, responded on April 24 with a letter notifying DOC officials its attorneys plan to file a lawsuit if a CBA including such provisions is passed.

“This sort of favoritism is a brazen violation of state law and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution,” said Freedom Foundation attorney Rebekah Millard. “Under Oregon law, an employer cannot discriminate against its employees based on union membership, and attempts to tie work benefits to membership status constitute an Unfair Labor Practice.”

The state is also on thin ice, she noted, when it discriminates against a worker because of his or her exercise of the First Amendment right to not pay moneyto a union.

“If the state puts stock in taking care of its employees, in abiding by state and federal law or even in its own bottom line in avoiding litigation,” Millard said, “it would do well to reject these Oregon AFSCME 75 shenanigans.”

Contact:
Rebekah Millard, Oregon Counsel- 503-951-6208- RMillard@freedomfoundation.com

Vice President of Communication and Federal Affairs
Ashley Varner brings a variety of public affairs experience and a tough skin to the Freedom Foundation team. Prior to joining the Freedom Foundation, Ashley spent many exciting, turbulent and wonderful years as a media spokesperson and state government liaison at the National Rifle Association. Following her tenure at the NRA, Ashley joined the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), where she worked with state and local lawmakers across the country on a diverse set of policy and communications issues. A grassroots activist from a young age, Ashley joined her first of many political campaigns before graduating high school and organized protests across the street from her own professors at the University of Missouri. When not rabble-rousing against Big Government, Ashley enjoys cooking, mafia movies, and has seen most of the 1970s and 80s classic rock bands still on tour. She loves the Chiefs, hopes someday she can love her Mizzou Tigers again, and she was a Kansas City Royals fan and Patriot Act opponent before either was cool.