by Nick
Dranias
Cross Post
Despite claims that “right to work” states do not recognize collective
bargaining by public employees, the truth is that “meet and confer” laws
are collective bargaining laws. And that has big ramifications for
longsuffering taxpayers nationwide.
More than money is at stake. Collective bargaining laws give unions an exclusive venue for flexing political muscle. Even “meet and confer” laws separate public officers from the public and corral them at a backroom bargaining table with union bosses. This increases the odds that public officers will yield to union demands and undermines the very foundation of our representative form of government. It inverts a government of, by and for the people, into a government that wears blinders while negotiating with itself over how to spend taxpayer money. Nick Dranias holds the Clarence J. and Katherine P. Duncan Chair for Constitutional Government and is director of the Joseph and Dorothy Donnelly Moller Center for Constitutional Government at the Goldwater Institute. Learn More: Goldwater Institute: Money for Nothing: Phoenix taxpayers foot the bill for union work Google Scholar: City of Phoenix v. Phoenix Employment Relations Board Virginia Code Ann. § 40.1-57.2 (2011): Statute banning public sector collective bargaining Source: Goldwater Institute |
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Public sector collective bargaining
threatens right to work states too