Unions leaders in Hawaii are likely breathing a sigh of relief this week after the U.S. Supreme Court deadlocked Tuesday听on a case that could have had major ramifications for how the unions operate.
The听4-4 vote in , which challenged the ability of unions to collect mandatory dues, means the听lower court ruling in favor of the CTA will stand for now.
The 听听as “the starkest illustration yet of how the sudden death of Justice Antonin Scalia last month has blocked the power of the court鈥檚 four remaining conservatives to move the law to the right.”
Anti-union plaintiffs听in the case appeared to be headed toward a Supreme Court victory when justices heard arguments in the case in January.
Statements by conservative justices at the time were worrisome enough听for some local union leaders to begin bracing for possible changes.
听Executive Director听wrote a note to members earlier this year saying the union was听鈥減reparing alternative approaches鈥 to maintaining UHPA鈥檚 capacity听should laws change in Hawaii as a result of the case.
Currently 25 states have听鈥淩ight to Work鈥 laws that prohibit compulsory union dues. In the other states, including Hawaii,听employees in unionized jobs听(such as public school teachers) can opt out of paying dues that go toward political activities but not dues that support things like听collective bargaining.
Teachers in the Friedrichs case argued that听requiring public employees to pay union dues violates the First Amendment. According to the听, which represented the anti-union teachers,听mandatory dues violate 鈥渨ell-settled principles of freedom of speech and association.鈥澨齌he suit asserts that听essentially all union activities, including collective bargaining, are inherently听political.
On its website Wednesday, the听听called the ruling 听“a victory for workers’ rights across the USA.”
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About the Author
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Jessica Terrell is the projects editor at Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at jterrell@civilbeat.org.