31 Jul 2006

Auto Union Hit with Federal Charges For Bullying Nurses Seeking to Remove Union

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**Toledo, OH (July 31, 2006)** – For the second time in four months, United Auto Workers (UAW) union officials face federal labor board charges for violating the rights of nurses at St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center. The latest charge, filed by St. Vincent nurse Amy Anderson, details union officials’ campaign of bullying and intimidation as Anderson and others sought to collect signatures from their co-workers to throw the unwanted union out of their workplace.

The nurse’s unfair labor practice charge against the UAW union and its Local 12, filed with the assistance of National Right to Work Foundation attorneys, lists numerous examples of union agents’ “thuggish and unlawful activities” including surveillance of nurses, writing down license plate numbers, stalking employees, massing around employees who sought to sign the decertification petition, verbal and physical intimidation of nurses and threats against employees seeking decertification.

The alleged harassment took place at and around the medical center including in the cafeteria, parking lots and even in bathrooms.

Despite the union officials’ organized campaign of unlawful intimidation, the nurses were able to collect signatures from 30 percent of employees – the minimum necessary to trigger a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) supervised decertification election. Once the signatures are certified by the NLRB Region 8 Director in Cleveland, the Board will hold a secret ballot election through which the health care professionals can rid their workplace of the abusive union.

“UAW union officials have unleashed a shameless campaign of intimidation upon St. Vincent nurses in their lust to preserve the flow of forced union dues,” said Foundation vice president Stefan Gleason. “Given such hostility for the rights of the very rank-and-file nurses that UAW officials claim to ‘represent,’ it comes as no surprise that many nurses are leading the effort to show them the door.”

Previously, four nurses from St. Vincents filed federal charges with the Board against the UAW union and its Toledo Local 12 for violating their rights by threatening to have nurses fired, despite failing to inform the employees of their right to refrain from formal union membership and the right to pay a reduced fee in lieu of full union dues. Under the Foundation-won United States Supreme Court decision Communications Workers v. Beck, union officials must inform workers of their right to remain nonmembers or resign from formal union membership and to refrain from paying for activities unrelated to collective bargaining, such as union political activities.

Tired of union officials’ mistreatment, a group of nurses formed “Nurses For A Union-Free St. Vincents” (www.NursesKnowTheTruth.bravehost.com) with the goal of decertifying the unwanted automotive union.

21 Jul 2006

Federal Agency Orders Union Officials to Retract Unlawful Threats Against Workers’ Jobs During 2005 Strike

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Pottstown, PA (July 21, 2006) – In response to charges brought by two local workers with free legal help from the National Right to Work Foundation, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in Washington, DC ordered the International Chemical Workers Union Council (ICWUC) Local 619C to retract threats against workers’ jobs intended to discourage them from continuing to work during a union-ordered strike against Cabot Supermetals in 2005.

Both David Cameron and Walter Reigner, chemical workers at the Cabot Supermetals factory in Boyertown, lost their jobs in November 2005 as part of a union-negotiated strike settlement between Cabot and ICWUC union officials. In the agreement, union officials explicitly demanded that Cabot management fire Cameron and Reigner, in addition to two other similarly-situated employees, for exercising their legal right to resign their formal union memberships and continue working during the strike. Cabot then handed their jobs over to less skilled and less senior workers.

The NLRB General Counsel issued a formal complaint in April, and agreed to prosecute the union for threatening to order workers fired. While the charges have awaited final resolution by the NLRB, Cabot has since rehired Reigner, but not Cameron. The General Counsel inexplicably refused to issue a complaint on the actual firings to bring the issue before the full NLRB.

In issuing its order, the NLRB cited an illegal union posting that threatened all workers at the Cabot facility stating, “If you are thinking about crossing the line remember this; if we win an unfair labor practice and you crossed the line YOU will be looking for a job for you will not be working for ‘scabot’ and maybe not for any union shop!”

“Union officials made an example of these workers to discourage others from refusing to toe the union line,” said Foundation Vice President Stefan Gleason. “How the NLRB General Counsel can find the threats of firings to be illegal but, at the same time, fail to address whether making good on those threats is also illegal is beyond comprehension.”

Cameron, Reigner, and their two colleagues exercised their right under the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Patternmakers v. NLRB to resign from formal union membership and continue working during a strike. The workers alleged that their firings violated the National Labor Relations Act and the duty of fair representation, which are supposed to protect employees from union retaliation or coercion.

20 Jul 2006

Hilton Employee Wins Settlement Forcing Union Officials to Halt Unlawful Misuse of Forced Dues

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**Honolulu, HI (July 20, 2006)** – With free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, a Hilton Hawaiian Village employee faced down a top UNITE-HERE union official and defeated a union policy of coercing non-union workers to pay for activities unrelated to collective bargaining.

Grant Suzuki, an electrician at the hotel, filed federal charges with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in March 2005 after the UNITE-HERE Local 5 union hierarchy violated his rights by requiring him and other similarly situated nonmembers to pay into strike funds that are subject to use in strikes in industries such as health care and entertainment – including some located in Guam and Saipan. In response, the NLRB agreed to prosecute the union for violating workers’ rights and scheduled a formal hearing for Tuesday, July 18.

Defense of the union’s unlawful policy was apparently of particular interest to John Wilhelm, national head of UNITE-HERE’s hospitality division, who came all the way from New York to attend the hearing before an NLRB administrative law judge in Honolulu. In the end, however, UNITE-HERE’s lawyers inked a settlement agreement that forces the union to stop misusing Hilton Hawaiian Village employees’ forced dues, post notices in the hotel describing the workers’ legal rights, and create a separate fund from nonmembers to be used only on strikes in hotel bargaining units in Hawaii.

“This victory is an incremental yet important step toward limiting the power of union officials to shake down workers to support Big Labor’s agenda,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “But as long as Hawaii workers labor under a system of compulsory unionism, such abuses will inevitably continue.”

UNITE-HERE officials are currently in contract negotiations with Hilton Hotels Corporation and are using the strike fund to leverage the chain to agree to a so-called “neutrality agreement” covering other hotels across the country. A neutrality agreement is a contract under which an employer actively supports a union’s attempt to organize its own workforce. Employers often enter into such agreements to stop union officials’ pressure tactics such as publicity stunts, frivolous litigation, and boycotts. The National Right to Work Foundation is the vanguard opponent of neutrality agreements in the courts and at the NLRB, providing free legal aid to employees across the country who are victimized by these pacts that severely undermine worker free choice.

Because UNITE-HERE does not currently have a contract with Hilton, any hotel employee who resigns his or her formal membership now can end all unwanted union dues seizures from their paychecks.

Although the settlement was an incremental victory for employees’ rights, it does not offer broad enough relief to workers under UNITE-HERE’s coercive monopoly bargaining agreements. Suzuki, with free legal assistance from the Foundation, plans to appeal the union and NLRB-signed settlement to end the collection of all forced dues for strikes.

18 Jul 2006

Kaiser Permanente and SEIU Union Forced to End Illegal Tactics To Push Unwanted Union on Workers

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**Portland, OR (July 18, 2006)** – In a victory for employee free choice, a group of workers aided by the National Right to Work Foundation have forced Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 49 officials to renounce their monopoly bargaining power over employees of Kaiser Foundation Health Plan (a component of the national Kaiser Permanente health network) after union organizers, with the company‘s help, used coercive tactics to force unionization on the employees.

The settlement of the employees’ unfair labor practice charges states that Kaiser will immediately terminate its voluntary recognition of the union as monopoly bargaining agent. Additionally, both the union hierarchy and Kaiser must issue notices to employees alerting them of their rights – including the right to refrain from formal union membership – and informing workers that the company will not bargain with union officials unless the employees so choose through the less abusive National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) secret ballot election process.

Kaiser unlawfully granted recognition to the SEIU union in October 2005 based on the results of a “card check” scheme – where union organizers browbeat employees to sign cards that are then counted as “votes” for unionization – even though an agreement between the company and union specifically stated that recognition would only be granted after a secret-ballot election determined that a majority of workers support the union. Workers reported that union officials explicitly told them that signing the “cards” was not a vote for unionization, but instead was a request to hold a secret-ballot election and to receive more information.

After having the unwanted union forced upon her and her coworkers, Karen Mayhew, who works in the Patient Business Services Department at a local Kaiser office, contacted the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation for free legal aid. In November, Mayhew filed charges at the NLRB for herself and roughly 65 similarly situated employees with legal assistance from Foundation attorneys.

Mayhew also filed a petition for decertification of the unwanted union within days of Kaiser’s granting SEIU officials monopoly bargaining power over the 65 affected workers. Now that union officials are stripped of their tainted monopoly bargaining status as part of the settlement, that petition to throw out the unwanted union is no longer necessary.

“Union officials tried to force unionization on these workers from the top down, like it or not,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “Union officials’ illegal behavior shows that they do not respect the rights of the workers they sought to represent; it was all about the money and finding additional sources of forced union dues revenues.”

View the NLRB Settlement, and the required union and employer notices to employees

13 Jul 2006

Worker Advocate Slams AFL-CIO’s “Week of Action” Protests While Do-Nothing NLRB Sits on Union Abuse Cases

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**Washington, DC (July 13, 2006)** – Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation, made the following statement in response to today’s protest by AFL-CIO union conglomerate professionals outside the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB):

“The public shouldn’t be fooled by AFL-CIO professionals shedding crocodile tears about recent National Labor Relations Board activity. They should instead be outraged that the Bush NLRB has done almost nothing to reverse substantial damage inflicted on independent employees’ rights by the labor agency during the Clinton era.

“According to a study by Jones Day attorney G. Roger King prepared for the American Bar Association, during the period of 1994-2001, the Clinton NLRB overturned 60 long-standing cases for a jaw-dropping 1181 years of combined precedent.

“These activist rulings increased union coercive privileges, entrenched incumbent unions, sharply undercut the rights of employees who disagree with a union, and diminished employer free speech.

“Yet, the Bush NLRB has been plagued by more than 5 years of paralysis and lack of productivity. As a result, the Bush NLRB has only overturned 9 precedents in the past 5 years, and several of them were insignificant procedural rulings. The Clinton NLRB turned labor law upside down, and the Bush NLRB has yet to right the ship.

“What concerns union officials the most is that the NLRB is considering several National Right to Work Foundation cases brought for workers who are desperately seeking protection from Big Labor’s increasingly ‘in your face’ organizing tactics. In these many long-pending cases, employees are pleading for the NLRB’s protection from union coercion and relief from Big Labor’s efforts to deny employees even so much as a secret-ballot vote when choosing whether to unionize.

“While workers seeking to remain union-free face public interrogations, bribery, threats, and stalkings by union operatives during these Top Down organizing drives, the Bush NLRB has dithered. If the agency fails to rule on the workers’ cases challenging these abusive tactics, employees face the further erosion of their freedom to choose whether to unionize.”

13 Jul 2006

Safeway Employee’s Suit Forces Union Officials to End Religious Discrimination

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**Seattle, WA (July 13, 2006)** – With free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, a Safeway employee won a judgment this week against United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) union officials forcing them to drop their discriminatory policy intended to deter workers from exercising their religious freedoms.

Daniel Gautschi, manager in a Safeway meat department, filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington in early May after UFCW Local 81 union officials set forth conditions that forced him, if he should ever have an employment grievance, to affiliate with – and pay additional money to – a union that conflicts with his religious beliefs.

Shortly after Gautschi filed his charges, the union hierarchy, governing Safeway stores in King and Kitsat counties, backtracked. Because federal law grants union officials many coercive privileges over employees, including the power to force their “representation” on workers who do not even want it, union lawyers recognized the union could not act discriminatorily toward nonunion members.

The union hierarchy therefore adopted a policy that all costs associated with grievance and arbitration processing of any employee – including religious objectors – are to be paid out of the union’s general treasury, which includes the forced union dues collected under its monopoly bargaining agreement. The settlement stipulates that union officials must refrain from further retaliation against Gautschi or any other employee who seeks to assert his or her legal rights to religious freedom.

Union officials allowed Gautschi to divert his forced union dues (paid as a condition of employment) to a charity – an accommodation previously won by Foundation attorneys – before Gautschi filed his lawsuit. However, they continued to maintain an illegal scheme intended to deter employees from exercising their right to assert religious objections in the first place. The discriminatory scheme forced only employees who assert religious objections to pay the union all costs associated with use of grievance procedures under the bargaining agreement – even though union officials tightly control the process, and employees are totally barred from filing grievances on their own.

As a devout Christian, Gautschi believes that supporting the UFCW union violates his sincerely held religious beliefs due to the union hierarchy’s support for special rights for homosexuals.

“This victory stalls UFCW union officials’ all-out offensive on employees’ right to freedom of religion in this part of Washington,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “However, employees of faith should not have to take legal action simply to force union officials to honor their fundamental rights.”

Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, union officials may not force any employee to financially support a union if doing so violates the employee’s sincerely held religious beliefs. To avoid the conflict between an employee’s faith and a requirement to pay fees to a union he or she believes to be immoral, the law requires union officials to attempt to accommodate the employee – most often by designating a mutually acceptable charity to receive the funds.

12 Jul 2006

Court Gives Green Light to Employees’ Federal Racketeering Lawsuit Against Union and Phone Book Company

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**Phoenix, AZ (July 12, 2006)** – A federal judge has cleared the way for a lawsuit against Dex Media, the official publisher of phone books, and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 1269 union by denying motions to dismiss by union and company lawyers.

Five Dex Media employees filed a federal racketeering lawsuit last September with free legal assistance from National Right to Work Foundation attorneys. Filed in U.S. District Court, the lawsuit alleges an elaborate scheme in which the employer, the IBEW union local, and two IBEW union agents working for Dex engaged in systematic violations of company policy and collective bargaining agreements in order to give preferential treatment to union officials at the expense of rank-and-file employees.

The workers allege that union agents have not only used their power to create labor strife for their own personal profit, but they have also cheated other workers out of earnings through the manipulation of a complex performance-based pay system used for workers selling advertising in Dex’s publications. In effect, the ill-gotten commissions the union agents improperly received raised the bar against which the other workers’ compensation packages were determined.

The suit also alleges that by knowingly aiding the union agents as they repeatedly broke company rules to increase their performance-based pay, Dex effectively bribed the union agents to act against the workers’ interests. Some of the methods used to increase the union agents’ compensation include reassigning to the union officials lucrative accounts that should have been assigned to other workers, giving the union agents “double commissions” for sales made by other workers, and allowing the union officials to regularly sell “group ads” allowing their customers to have better ad placement than would normally be warranted, all practices explicitly forbidden by Dex written policy.

Because of the pattern of illegal activity by Dex, the Local 1269 IBEW union, and the union’s agents, the suit lists five counts for violating the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and two counts for violating the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act. The RICO statutes are best known for having been used to prosecute criminals for Mob and gang activities.

“This clears the path for these employees to seek justice from these union officials who have been stealing from the very workers they claim to represent,” said National Right to Work Foundation vice president Stefan Gleason.

Now that District Court Judge Murguia has denied the motions to dismiss, proceedings can continue so that the wronged employees can have their day in court. After the case was originally filed, Dex Media was acquired by RH Donnelley for a reported $9.5 billion. Plaintiffs’ attorneys may amend the complaint to include any post-merger racketeering that has occurred under RH Donnelley’s watch.

7 Jul 2006

Union Officials Backtrack in Response to Firefighters’ Federal Lawsuit and Temporarily Halt Union Dues Seizures

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**Lexington, KY (July 7, 2006)** – In response to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed by seven nonunion Lexington firefighters with free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) Local 526 union officials have temporarily backtracked and asked Lexington city officials to cease the seizure of forced union dues from the firefighters’ paychecks.

The suit against the IAFF Local 526, filed June 22 by the firefighters in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, also named Lexington Mayor Teresa Isaac, and other top city officials, for signing and enforcing an agreement with the union that resulted in the unconstitutional acts. The firefighters had asked the court to enjoin IAFF officials from seizing mandatory dues from any nonunion employee forced to be “represented” by the union officials until they provided the legally required notice and procedures. Local 526 officials backtracked to head off an embarrassing court order.

While IAFF union officials have ceased the illegal dues collections, they have not yet addressed the firefighters’ demands for restitution for past violations of their constitutional rights, including refunds of all forced dues seized improperly since the collective bargaining agreement went into effect in June 2005. However, this apparent admission of wrong-doing marks a reversal by Local 526 union official Mark Blankenship who was quoted in news reports immediately following the lawsuit’s filing claiming: “We follow all of the federal and state rules.”

“Apparently only a federal lawsuit will persuade these union officials to begin to respect long standing law and the constitutional rights of the very firefighters they claim to ‘represent’,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “This case demonstrates how vulnerable employees are in Kentucky, since there is not yet a Right to Work law on the books making union membership and dues payment strictly voluntary.”

The firefighters’ lawsuit will continue until IAFF Local 526 union officials address all the constitutional violations raised in the complaint.

Under the Foundation-won U.S. Supreme Court decision Chicago Teachers Union v. Hudson, before seizing any forced dues, union officials must first provide an independent audited disclosure of the union’s expenses. Such audits are intended to ensure that forced union dues seized from nonunion public employees do not fund union activities unrelated to collective bargaining, such as union political activities.

6 Jul 2006

Nurses Hit Union and Medical Center with Federal Charges for Violating Their Freedom to Choose Whether to Unionize

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**Santa Ana, CA (July 6, 2006)** – A Western Medical Center nurse has filed class action unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) against his employer and the California Nurses Association (CNA) union to stop an illegal scheme designed to push unwanted unionization on him and his fellow registered nurses.

Sherwood Cox filed the charges at the NLRB Region 21 office in Los Angeles, against the CNA union and Western Medical Center in Santa Ana with assistance from the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation.

Cox’s charges seek to protect the nurses’ right to choose freely whether or not to unionize. The charges detail how CNA union officials illegally bargained with the nurses’ employer over their wages and working conditions despite the fact that the nurses have not chosen to unionize. Included with Cox’s charges is a copy of a 26-page “neutrality agreement” negotiated by union officials with the medical center that describes how the employer will assist the union in organizing the medical center’s registered nurses, and it details specific collective bargaining concessions, including terms for wages and health benefits, that the medical center will receive in exchange.

The traditional process requires that the NLRB hold a secret ballot election to determine if a majority of workers support unionization, but the pact – misleadingly dubbed the “Election Procedures Agreement” – outlines a system by which union officials can organize the nurses without even demonstrating true majority support. With monopoly bargaining status, union officials could then force all the nurses to pay dues to the union just to keep their jobs. Union officials hold this power because California is one of 28 states that has not yet passed a Right to Work law, which would mandate that union membership and dues payment are strictly optional.

“Union officials have violated long standing Supreme Court and NLRB precedent in their push to sweep these nurses into their forced dues-paying ranks,” said Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Foundation. “Instead of allowing employees to exercise free choice in deciding if they want a union to represent them, CNA officials are determined to push unionization on these nurses from the top down – like it or not.”

Under the Supreme Court’s International Ladies Garment Workers v. NLRB decision, a union cannot become the monopoly bargaining representative of workers without the support of a majority of all employees. Furthermore, in the NLRB’s Majestic Weaving Co. decision, the board recognized that allowing union officials to engage in pre-recognition bargaining with an employer is a violation of worker rights.

The NLRB Region 21 Director will now investigate the charges and decide whether to issue a formal complaint and prosecute the CNA union and the Medical Center.

29 Jun 2006

Federal Labor Board Authorizes Forced Unionization of Airport Security Screeners

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**Washington, DC (June 29, 2006)** – The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled that airport security screeners employed by private government contractors fall under the agency’s jurisdiction, and therefore can be subjected to forced unionization. The ruling resulted from the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) refusal to back previous Bush Administration policy against granting monopoly bargaining privileges to union officials over airport security screeners, citing national security concerns.

The National Right to Work Foundation filed an amicus curiae brief in the controversial NLRB case at issue, known as Firstline Transportation Security, in which union lawyers sought to unionize screeners employed by private firms working under the direction of the TSA. The Foundation’s brief asked the Board to reconsider a lower decision to apply the National Labor Relations Act to private airport screeners working at the Kansas City International Airport.

A 2003 directive from TSA head Admiral James Loy made the Bush Administration’s position clear, stating union officials may not obtain monopoly bargaining privileges over federal screeners employed by TSA due to national security concerns. And yet, TSA would not take a clear position in the NLRB case opposing the forced unionization of screeners employed by private companies, even though such screeners are trained and supervised by the TSA, and serve exactly the same function as federal screeners.

“Aside from violating workers’ freedom of association, history tells us that interjecting forced unionism into such sensitive areas could have severe ramifications for Americans,” stated National Right to Work Foundation Vice President Stefan Gleason. “The TSA bureaucracy’s refusal to uphold Bush Administration policy left the door open for the NLRB to put the interests of union officials above national security.”

Foundation attorneys argued that granting Security, Police and Firefighters Professionals of America (SPFPA) union officials the special privilege to force airport screeners into union collectives and, ultimately, to collect compulsory union dues, would both undermine national security by destabilizing security screeners’ work environment and infringe on workers’ freedoms.

The Foundation also chronicled threats to national security from illegal strikes, work slowdowns, or even terrorist infiltration of a union to allow a bomb or hijacker to be sneaked aboard a plane. Writing in dissent to the NLRB decision, Board member Peter Kirsanow agreed with Foundation attorneys’ arguments stating that, “National security is the trump card, and it has been played; the Board should fold its hand.”

In August 2005, Foundation President Mark Mix wrote to President Bush expressing “deep concern” over the bureaucratic reversal of Administration policy regarding the forced unionization of airport screeners under TSA oversight. Mix urged President Bush to correct the TSA bureaucracy’s sudden change in policy, explaining that it contradicted TSA’s earlier directives. Responding to public criticism, the TSA filed a “clarification” of its position in the case, but the NLRB majority felt it fell short of a reversal.