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  • 2011-01-07 (xsd:date)
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  • Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker says the state can severely restrict contract bargaining rights for state employee unions (en)
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  • There’s little doubt about where Gov. Scott Walker is coming from when it comes to public employees and the size of state government. With a hole of about $3 billion in the state budget, Walker aims to wring as many concessions as possible from state workers. In a Jan. 3, 2011 New York Times article , Walker called public employees haves and taxpayers have-nots. And he has vowed to restore balance for taxpayers. In December 2010, even before he took office, the door opened wider for Walker when the Democratic-controlled Legislature could not muster enough votes to approve contracts for 39,000 state workers negotiated by outgoing Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat. Those contracts, which cover 2009-2011, and future deals are now in the hands of Walker, a Republican, and the GOP-controlled Legislature. In early December, at a Milwaukee Press Club luncheon, Walker indicated that when he took office he would take a broad view of his authority. Walker said he was open to considering anything from the decertify all the way through modifications of the current laws in place. He added: The bottom line is that we are going to look at every legal means we have to try to put that balance more on the side of taxpayers and the people who care about services. If anything, now that Walker’s in office, the question of what authority he and like-minded lawmakers have to change bargaining rules is more important. Could Walker, as he claimed, take action to sharply curtail the bargaining rights of state employee unions? Let’s start with the question of decertifying unions. That phrase refers to a decision by union members to disband. Government cannot decertify a union; only the members can. Walker clearly incorrectly used that term -- he repeated it after it was included in a question by a reporter at the Press Club event. In the wake of Walker’s comment, some critics seized on that word to declare Walker was flat-out wrong about what he could do as governor. However, focusing on the word decertify ignores the entirety of the full statement, which is what we are evaluating in this item. He can’t decertify a union per se, labor historian Ken Germanson said in a radio interview with WUWM. But Germanson and other labor experts agree that Walker and the Legislature have control over bargaining parameters because it is the state that sets the rules for the areas subject to negotiations. That is, Walker can change the rules if the Legislature goes along. And with Republicans holding both chambers, he may have support on those fronts. What would Walker have to do? It’s as simple -- and complicated -- as amending the state Employee Relations Act, said Peter Davis, general counsel at the Wisconsin Employment Relations Commission. While federal labor law covers unions at private employers; state employees are covered by that piece of state law. Though it has not changed much over the years, it could be changed. The rights established by the State Employment Labor Relations Act have not been amended in any significant way for at least the last 30 years -- aside from expanding/adding the types/numbers of employees who have (the) rights, Davis said. Davis and other experts say Walker and the Legislature probably could not do away with labor unions entirely, but they could modify what’s subject to negotiations. For instance, they could eliminate subjects like health insurance and pensions from collective bargaining. That would allow the administration to impose changes in those areas. Walker has said requiring employees to pay 5 percent of wages toward their pensions and 12 percent of their health care costs could save the state $150 million between January and June. Other permitted topics for bargaining include wages, vacation time and work conditions. State employee unions do not have a right to binding arbitration to settle impasses. And the labor act forbids strikes -- something the state likely would not want to give up. Without arbitration or a credible strike threat, Davis said, when compared to other public employee unions state employee unions have always had less power at the bargaining table. Marty Beil, executive director of the Wisconsin State Employees Union, told the Journal Sentinel that the state law assures the uninterrupted delivery of high-quality public services and has kept labor peace for more than three decades. Walker spokesman Cullen Werwie said the governor would not include a rewrite of the state law as part of the emergency special session of the Legislature called to deal with the economy and jobs. He said there are a number of options available, including immediately beginning talks with state employee unions. There are two parties in contract negotiations, the state and the unions, Werwie said. My guess is that union leadership will stay the same, the state negotiator will change (under Walker), which I would argue is a 50 percent change in participants. That 50 percent change will provide the incoming administration with greater latitude in contract talks. All that remains to be seen. Where does that leave us right now? In his response to a question, Walker misused the phrase decertify -- he can’t make state employees unions vanish. But labor experts agree with the central part of Walker’s statement -- the Legislature could rewrite the laws governing what issues are subject to negotiation, which could tilt the bargaining table in the administration’s favor. We rate Walker’s statement Mostly True. (en)
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