Voters will decide on ‘right to unionize’ constitutional amendment
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[October 05, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois voters will be asked
in November to decide whether the right of workers to form unions and
engage in collective bargaining should be enshrined in the state
constitution.
The first clause of the amendment contains two sentences. The first
would establish a “fundamental right to organize and to bargain
collectively and to negotiate wages, hours, and working conditions, and
to promote their economic welfare and safety at work.”
The second would prohibit the state or any local unit of government from
enacting “any law that interferes with, negates, or diminishes the right
of employees to organize and bargain collectively over their wages,
hours, and other terms and conditions of employment and workplace
safety.”
The provision is intended to prevent passage of any state or local
“right to work” laws, which prohibit employers from requiring workers to
be union members to keep their jobs.
The second clause states that the amendment would be controlling over
another part of the constitution that spells out the powers of home rule
units of local government, meaning those units of government would still
be subject to the amendment.
Lawmakers approved putting the measure on the ballot during the 2021
spring session. The resolution passed both chambers with bipartisan
support: 49-7 in the Senate and 80-30 in the House.
Like any constitutional issue, however, there is considerable
disagreement over what those words mean and what effects they would have
if the amendment is adopted.
The proposal is supported by several large labor unions, but it has
drawn opposition from groups such as the Illinois Association of School
Boards, the Illinois Chamber of Commerce and the Illinois Manufacturers’
Association.
To gather a sense of the arguments for and against the measure, the
Illinois Associated Press Media Editors convened an online forum with
Joe Bowen, communications director for a Vote Yes for Workers Rights,
the only organized political committee campaigning on the issue. They
also spoke with Mailee Smith, director of labor policy and a staff
attorney with the Illinois Policy Institute, a conservative think tank
that opposes the measure.
The questions came from representatives of the Daily Herald and Shaw
Media. The video is available here or linked below.
Bowen and Smith were asked at the outset what they believe the amendment
would mean and the implications of adopting it.
“The workers’ rights amendment will guarantee your fundamental rights in
the workplace to organize and bargain collectively with your coworkers
to negotiate for things like better pay, safer working conditions, and
crucially, it will also protect Illinois voters from politicians who try
to take away their rights in the future,” Bowen said.
He said it gives Illinois workers an opportunity “to vote for themselves
on Nov. 8.”
“It will enshrine protections that most of us are already enjoying while
extending protection to workers who don't currently have it,” Bowen
said. “It will be a tremendous win for our workers as well as our entire
economy and local communities.”
Smith, on the other hand, asserted that the amendment would apply only
to public-sector workers because private-sector workers are already
covered by the National Labor Relations Act, which would supersede any
state law or state constitutional provision.
As a result, she argued that it would drive up local property taxes by
giving public employee unions power to negotiate a broader range of
issues, including “economic welfare,” which isn’t defined in the
amendment or other state law.
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“And it's not defined in other similar laws like the National Labor
Relations Act,” she said. “That could mean things like the expansion of
affordable housing or positions on rent abatement could be demanded by
government unions.”
She also said the provision preempting right-to-work laws could have
unintended consequences.
“It prohibits lawmakers, as the people's representatives, from ever
enacting reforms or fixes,” she said. “So if lawmakers decide down the
line, ‘Oh, wow, we didn't mean economic welfare to mean all of these
broad subjects,’ they could never go back and define what economic
welfare actually is because they'd be prohibited in the amendment itself
from doing that.”
Bowen countered that the amendment has nothing to do with taxes but,
instead, protects only the right of workers to organize and bargain
collectively in the workplace.
If it were adopted, he said, it would apply uniformly statewide to all
workers in both the public and private sectors. He also said it would
protect workers from politicians who attempt to enact right-to-work
laws, a reference to former Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, who tried
unsuccessfully to push such legislation through the General Assembly.
Finally, he suggested that the rights spelled out in federal law could
change or be repealed at any time, referring to the recent U.S. Supreme
Court ruling that overturned the right to abortion that had been
established under Roe v. Wade.
“And I think it's critically important at a time when we don't know
what's going to happen tomorrow – and we've seen a lot of
unpredictability and rights under attack, both federally and here in
Illinois – to make sure that these rights stay in a lockbox and that
they're safe for workers for generations to come,” he said.
As a follow-up, the two were asked to identify what rights workers would
have under the amendment that they don’t already have under existing
law.
Bowen said the amendment would protect existing rights and extend them
to “hundreds of thousands” of workers who aren’t covered under existing
law. He said it’s important to guarantee bargaining rights now and into
the future, considering “we spend almost half of our lives in the
workplace.”
“Whether or not you have the ability to earn a good living, to stay safe
on the job, it really impacts every part of your life,” he said. “So
making sure that we guarantee these protections in the Illinois
Constitution is critically important.”
Smith argued that elevating collective bargaining rights to the level of
the constitution would put labor agreements beyond the reach of existing
statutes that apply to public employee contracts.
“If a teachers union didn't want to have background checks as part of
the job application process, the hiring process, they could write that
into their contract,” she said. “It could keep government union
contracts a secret. They could actually void the (Freedom of Information
Act) law that requires government union contracts to be open to the
public, simply by writing that provision into the contract.”
Bowen initially declined to respond to that assertion, but later in the
discussion said, “I don't believe it's legally permissible to enter into
a contract that violates state or federal law.”
Constitutional amendments have two paths to passage in Illinois. If the
measure receives 60 percent of the vote from those voting on the
question, it passes. But if it fails to reach the 60 percent threshold
on the question but still musters “yes” votes from more than half of
those voting in the election, it would still pass.
Election Day is Nov. 8, but early voting has already begun. More
information is available at local election authorities.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |