REUTERS-Republican lawmakers
in Kentucky will take up a bill on Saturday that would make it the 27th U.S.
state to allow workers the right to work in union-
represented shops and receive
union-negotiated benefits without paying dues to the representing body.
Republican lawmakers
in a handful of states have passed similar so called "right-to-work"
and anti-union laws over the last few years. Supporters say the measures spur
economic growth while opponents cast the laws as assaults on organized labor
and blue-collar workers that limit union revenues.
The effort to pass
the legislation in Kentucky comes two months after Republicans won control of
the state's General Assembly for the first time since 1921. Republicans now
control both chambers in the state's legislature and the governor's office.
A Kentucky Senate
committee on Friday passed the "right-to-work" bill, sending it to
the full Senate, which has scheduled a rare Saturday session in hopes of
getting the measure to become law in the coming days.
“I personally have
no problem with an individual opting to be part of a labor union ... but
government shouldn’t stand in the way of someone who opts not to join a union,”
said Speaker of the House Jeff Hoover in a statement earlier this week.
It is widely
expected that Republican Governor Matt Bevin will sign it into law in the
coming days if lawmakers approve it. If so, Kentucky will immediately become
the 27th state and the last Southern state to enact "right-to-work"
legislation.
Supporters of the
measure claim it will make Kentucky more competitive with neighboring states
with similar laws in attracting new business.
Kentucky has been
unable to pass "right-to-work" legislation in the past because of its
strong union ties across the state, labor leaders said. The Republican-led
state Senate had passed similar bills in recent years, but House Democrats
refused to hear the bills.
“The future of the
fight is in, as best we can, trying to stop the erosion of wages, benefits and
safety,” said Caitlin Lally, a spokeswoman for the United Food and Commercial
Workers Local 227 in Louisville and vice president of the Greater Louisville
Central Labor Council.
State Democrats
urged people to come to Frankfort on Saturday to protest.
"Politicians
didn’t create the labor movement, and politicians won’t destroy the labor
movement," said DeLane Adams, spokesman for the AFL-CIO Southern regional
office.
0 Comments