Illinois House Speaker’s staff could test limits of Workers’ Rights
Amendment
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[September 15, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Efforts to form a union by staff in House Speaker Emanuel
“Chris” Welch’s office could provide an early and unexpected test of the
new Workers’ Rights Amendment to the Illinois Constitution.
Brady Burden, a staffer in the speaker’s office who is part of the
organizing committee of the Illinois Legislative Staff Association, said
efforts to unionize have thus far been stymied by a provision in state
law that specifically exempts the General Assembly from the Illinois
Public Labor Relations Act.
But there is no such exemption in the Workers’ Rights Amendment,
approved by voters less than a year ago. That addition to the state’s
constitution provides, in part, that all employees have a “fundamental
right” to organize and engage in collective bargaining over wages, hours
and working conditions.
But at least one expert in Illinois labor law says relying on that
amendment may be more difficult legally for the workers than it might
first appear.
“Anytime this (constitutional amendment) is going to be litigated, if
ever, it's going to require some degree of interpretation. It just will
because it’s just not clear,” said Michael LeRoy, a professor at the
University of Illinois College of Law and the School of Labor and
Employment Relations. “It's not exactly clear what this means.”
According to Burden, efforts to form a union began last year but they
did not go public with their campaign until May. He said well over half
of the 38 employees who would be part of the bargaining unit – analysts,
researchers and people who work with legislators – have signed a
petition calling to form a union, which would be enough for automatic
recognition by most other public employers.
Among the issues they’d like to negotiate, Burden said, are wages and
hours. He said the starting salary for Democratic House staffers is
around $43,000 annually, which he said is significantly lower than
comparable jobs in the Senate or even for House Republican staff. He
also said they would like better compensation for overtime.
Legislative staff jobs are exempt from wage and hour laws, so those
workers do not receive the standard time-and-a-half when they work more
than 40 hours in a week – which they do routinely during legislative
sessions. Instead, Burden said, they receive roughly one hour of comp
time for every three hours of overtime they work.
But because current law specifically exempts the General Assembly from
the definition of a “public employer,” Burden said they are asking Welch
to recognize their union voluntarily.
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House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, is pictured at a
news conference in the governor’s office earlier this year. (Capitol
News Illinois file photo by Jerry Nowicki)
Welch’s office, however, has said he prefers they hold an election
because recognizing the union voluntarily would deny staff the chance to
weigh in on which organization they’d like to represent them.
Burden said that can’t be done because of the exemption in current state
law, leaving them with the options of voluntary recognition or a
lawsuit.
“It's in the Constitution. We have a right to organize,” Burden said.
“The only issue that we need, is that the speaker recognize the union.”
LeRoy, however, said the Worker’s Rights Amendment is actually vague on
that issue because it’s written in prospective terms, referring to
future enactments by the state or local governments.
He said that although the first sentence of the amendment says employees
have a fundamental right to organize, the next sentence says, “No law
shall be passed that interferes with, negates, or diminishes” collective
bargaining rights.
“They use the term ‘shall be.’ That's future tense,” he said. “It
doesn't reach back. It doesn't say any law that has been enacted that
interferes with collective bargaining is hereby nullified. It doesn't
say that.”
LeRoy said the purpose of the amendment was to prevent the enactment of
so-called “right-to-work” laws at either the state or local level. Those
are laws that say employers cannot require someone to be a member of a
union as a condition of employment.
“This constitutional amendment really grew out of the experience with
(former Republican) Gov. Bruce Rauner, who really wanted to make
Illinois a right-to-work state,” he said. “That was a Democratic
reaction to, or response to, (Rauner).”
LeRoy said that from a legal standpoint, he believes the Workers’ Rights
Amendment is not a convincing argument for those trying to form a union.
But he added, “Politically, it is very convincing.”
“I mean, in effect, this is really calling out the Democratic-controlled
General Assembly as a group of hypocrites,” he said. “You're legislating
for thee, not me. And I think in the court of public opinion, that's
where this battle can be waged with a better chance of success.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
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the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation,
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