Mandatory Union Fees at Risk
The U.S. Supreme Court will listen to arguments soon in another challenge to the mandatory fees that some government employees must pay to their unions for negotiating and administering their contracts.
The basis for this challenge comes from a precedent set in 1977 known as Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, in which the court unanimously upheld mandatory public-sector union fees, also known as agency fees. The ramifications of this court challenge endangers tens of thousands of union contracts in nearly half of the states that are organized around the framework established in Abood. This is the third time in four years that the Court has examined this issue.
Click here to read the full article.
Categories: Employment, Employment Tax & Withholding, Labor Relations, U.S. Supreme Court, Union
Categories
- Legislative Updates
- Regulations
- Health Insurance Exchange
- News
- Privacy
- Contracts
- Tax
- Fashion
- Union
- Technology
- Affordable Care Act
- Cybersecurity
- Employee Handbook
- Harassment
- Wage and Hour
- Employee Benefits
- Alerts and Updates
- Safety
- Pension
- Audits
- Employment Tax & Withholding
- First Amendment
- Overtime
- Health Care Reform
- Criminal
- Liability
- Labor Relations
- U.S. Supreme Court
- Did you Know?
- Lawsuit
- OSHA and MIOSHA
- News & Events
- Employment
- National Labor Relations Board
- Compliance
- Department of Labor
- Trade Secrets