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‘Right To Work’ Enters Discussions On Road Money

A packed Capitol Rotunda photo taken the week "Right to Work" legislation passed in Michigan. File Photo: Rick Pluta.
Rick Pluta
/
Michigan Public Radio Network
A packed Capitol Rotunda photo taken the week "Right to Work" legislation passed in Michigan. File Photo: Rick Pluta.

Negotiations between Republicans and Democrats at the state Capitol over road funding may have resurrected the controversy over Michigan’s right-to-work law.

There’s a lot of deal-making happening in Lansing as the Legislature enters the final days before its summer recess. The two biggest issues are finishing the state budget, and coming up with more than $1.2 billion new dollars a year for roads – Governor Rick Snyder’s top priority before lawmakers leave Lansing.

Republicans are in the majority in the House and Senate. But Snyder and GOP leaders won’t win a roads deal without support from Democrats. They simply don’t have enough support for new taxes or fees from their own ranks in the Legislature.

Democrats say their support won’t come without some big concessions from Republicans. At the top of their list is new tax breaks for lower-income families who would see a bigger share of their earnings go to higher fuel or sales taxes. 

But some unions and Democrats have also just put on the table re-visiting the state’s right-to-work law, rammed through the Legislature in a rancorous “lame duck” session two years ago.

It’s a fair demand, says state House Democratic Leader Tim Greimel, because the right-to-work law was pushed through so quickly, after the elections and without public hearings “...because they know that ultimately, it undermines labor organizations, and undermines their ability to negotiate higher wages and benefits for workers.”

He says the idea – dubbed “fair share” -- is to allow union locals to charge a “bargaining fee” to members who don’t pay dues or an “agency fee” under the right-to-work law.

“If somebody is benefitting from a collective bargaining agreement, they’d have to pay not the full amount of union dues, they wouldn’t have to do that, but they would have pay some lesser amount to cover the administrative cost that the union has in negotiating that collective bargaining agreement.”

That’s a non-starter, says the sponsor of the right-to-work law.

“Not only do I think it’s a bad idea, it’s a hell of a bad idea, and I’d probably oppose that with just about everything that I’ve got,” says Representative Mike Shirkey (R-Clarklake). 

“So if I understand this correctly, people are trying to use the need to address the under-funding of our roads and infrastructure, and use this an opportunity to still, yet expand forced unionization.” 

Shirkey says a condition like that would cause even more Republican support for roads revenue to drop off.

Some other demands by Democrats include promises not to tinker with the prevailing wage or Michigan’s Electoral College votes in a “lame duck” session after the November elections have passed.

Snyder and Republican leaders in the Legislature have tried to keep other issues out of the discussions on roads. Democrats say they’ve been shut out of negotiations on so many issues for so long, that’s not an option they’re willing to consider. 

Rick Pluta is Senior Capitol Correspondent for the Michigan Public Radio Network. He has been covering Michigan’s Capitol, government, and politics since 1987. His journalism background includes stints with UPI, The Elizabeth (NJ) Daily Journal, The (Pontiac, MI) Oakland Press, and WJR. He is also a lifelong public radio listener.