Defying Predictions, Union Membership Isn't Dropping Post-Janus
The Supreme Courts ruling was expected to diminish union membership. But so far, many unions have actually increased their numbers since the verdict. Conservative groups are working to reverse that trend in the long run.
DECEMBER 10, 2018
By Katherine Barrett & Richard Greene | Columnists
Five months ago, the U.S. Supreme Court dealt what was seen as a massive blow to unions in Janus v. AFSCME. The justices banned the collection of union fees from public workers who receive union-negotiated benefits but choose not to belong to the union.
The ruling had an immediate negative effect on union finances. In Pennsylvania, for instance, refunding fees to nonmembers resulted in a roughly 15 percent loss of the $42.5 million that unions collected from executive branch members and nonmembers in 2017, according to the states Office of Administration.
The courts decision also led many to predict that massive defections of union members would follow. But so far, even as anti-union organizations wage campaigns to convince members to drop out, most are staying put. Some unions have actually increased their numbers since the Janus verdict.
I think the right wing thought this would decimate public-sector unions, and they were clearly wrong, says Kim Cook of the Cornell University Worker Institute, which provides research and education in support of unions and workers rights.
FULL story: http://www.governing.com/topics/workforce/gov-janus-impact-union-membership.html