Lawsuit Challenges Constitutionality Of Union-Enabling ‘Exclusivity’ Law

Lawsuit Challenges Constitutionality Of Union-Enabling ‘Exclusivity’ Law
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Lawsuit Challenges Constitutionality Of Union-Enabling ‘Exclusivity’ Law

The Freedom Foundation and the National Right to Work Foundation have announced they will join forces to file a class-action lawsuit this week that could, if successful, change the rules of engagement between state government and public-sector unions not only in Washington but throughout the rest of the nation, as well.

Details of the suit will be announced at a media event at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 5, on the steps of the Washington State Supreme Court Building in Olympia with a handful of state lawmakers planning to be on hand to lend their support.

The watershed case, which will have been filed earlier that morning on behalf of four Washington family childcare providers, is a direct attack on the principle of exclusivity, by which one labor union is designated as the sole bargaining representative for every individual worker within a given bargaining unit.

In the case of the plaintiffs, SEIU 925 was recognized in 2006 as the exclusive bargaining representative for thousands of family childcare providers throughout the state on the basis of a single election open to all of its potential members. However, despite the outcome of the vote, the four plaintiffs still don’t want to be union members, pay dues or even have the union bargain on their behalf.

Under current state law, they have no choice.

“Let’s set aside the fact there has only been one election in all these years and that, even then, only a small minority of those who could be potentially affected by the decision actually voted to recognize the union,” said Freedom Foundation General Counsel James Abernathy. “We believe those are important considerations, too, but our objection is more fundamental. We believe it violates a worker’s First Amendment rights under the Constitution to be forced to join, be represented — or even support — a union, vote or no vote.”

The lawsuit also asks for damages in the amount of three years’ worth of “unconstitutionally collected dues for each of the plaintiffs,” Abernathy said.

“The plaintiffs would have asked for more,” he said, “but the statute of limitations only allows us to go back three years.”

Abernathy said the case is the first of its kind in the nation, and could eventually be decided at the U.S. Supreme Court.

“Every precedent-setting case has to start somewhere,” he said, “and we think the law is very clear on this point. No one should have to decide between quitting their job or being represented by a union against their will. It doesn’t matter whether 10,000 people want the union and only one person doesn’t. It’s a violation of that one individual’s First Amendment rights, which are supposed to be absolute.”

Abernathy said the U.S. Supreme Court signaled its willingness to consider such a debate last summer when it ruled in Harris v. Quinn that Medicare-subsidized home healthcare providers in Illinois were not full-fledged state employees and, thus, could not be forced to pay union dues or representation fees.

The plaintiffs in that case had asked the court to overturn Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, the 1976 ruling allowing compulsory dues collection by the union designated in given a state as the exclusive bargaining representative for a particular occupation. The justices stopped short of doing so, but left the door open for a case more directly targeting Abood.

The Freedom Foundation case hopes to invalidate Abood if necessary — and more.

“Courts correct their earlier mistakes every day,” Abernathy said. “We think this is a perfect opportunity to correct a mistake that’s had a huge, negative impact on a lot of lives.”

Milton Chappell, senior counsel at the National Right to Work Foundation and co-counsel for the plaintiffs, has litigated dozens of similar cases all across the country.

“Last year’s Harris decision declared what these providers already knew — a provider who is a public employee only because she receives state subsidy reimbursements should not be forced to pay any fees to a union against her will,” he said, “But Washington’s law mandates exactly the opposite.

“Washington law also demands that all providers be represented by SEIU, a hyper-political labor organization, and indeed makes it illegal for providers to bargain with the state, themselves,” Chappell explained. “That is as fundamental a free association violation as the forced fees. I’m happy to represent these providers who are determined to enjoy their constitutional rights.”

The Freedom Foundation is an Olympia-based nonprofit, nonpartisan think and action tank promoting the ideals of free markets and smaller, more accountable government.

Based in Springfield, Va., the National Right to Work Foundation, is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, single-purpose citizens’ organization dedicated to the principle that all Americans must have the right to join a union if they choose to, but none should ever be forced to affiliate with a union in order to get or keep a job.

press@freedomfoundation.com