调和代理费原则、第一修正案与现代公共部门联盟

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Northwestern University Law Review Pub Date : 2017-08-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.3029560
Courtlyn G. Roser-Jones
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在改善中产阶级工作条件方面,很少有机构比工会做得更多。当然,他们的努力是要花钱的。为了资助工会活动,全国数千份集体谈判协议长期以来一直包括允许雇主要求员工支付“公平份额”或“代理”费用的条款。在公共工会中,“当雇主是政府时”,这种安排在两个重要价值观之间产生了紧张关系:第一修正案对强迫表达的保护,以及工人代表的集体利益。近四十年前,在Abood诉底特律教育委员会一案中,当面临这种紧张局势时,最高法院达成了一项令人不安的妥协,允许公共部门工会收回集体谈判的费用,但不能收回政治活动的费用。几十年来,这一决定一直是一个避雷针,一些学者呼吁推翻这一决定,而另一些学者则坚持保留这一决定。与此同时,现代公共部门集体谈判的现实发生了变化,第一修正案的判例也在演变。最高法院最近表示有兴趣重新审视这个问题,巡回法院正在审理测试案件。现在是重新考虑Abood脆弱妥协的时候了。这一条为第一修正案提供了一条新的前进道路,它尊重工会活动和言论自由的重要性。它提出了一种调和这两种利益的方法,同时也更新了理论,以考虑到州立法努力、现代联邦现实和第一修正案的法理发展。具体而言,该条款认为,代理费应与当前的政治捐款和竞选资金判例相一致。在这种方法下,一些代理费“但只有那些为了避免不必要的表达侵权而“密切相关”的费用才是合法的”。这种中间立场的做法可能无法满足那些强烈反对任何形式代理费的人,或者那些希望Abood规则得到充分维护的人。尽管如此,它仍然是克服困难的最佳途径:它避免了工会和政治活动之间的错误二分法,尊重制定创新集体谈判法规的州立法机构,并将公共部门代理费与第一修正案判例的其他连贯方面联系起来。
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Reconciling Agency Fee Doctrine, the First Amendment, and the Modern Public Sector Union
Few institutions have done more to improve working conditions for the middle class than labor unions. Their efforts, of course, cost money. To fund union activities, thousands of collective bargaining agreements across the nation have long included provisions permitting employers to require employees to pay "fair share," or "agency" fees. In public unions "when the employer is the government" this arrangement creates tension between two important values: the First Amendment's protection against compelled expression, and the collective benefits of worker representation. When confronted with this tension nearly forty years ago in Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, the Supreme Court struck an uneasy compromise, allowing public sector unions to recoup expenses for collective bargaining, but not for political activity. For decades, the decision has been a lightning rod, with some scholars calling for its reversal and others insisting on its preservation. In the meantime, the realities of modern public sector collective bargaining have changed, and First Amendment jurisprudence has evolved. The Supreme Court has recently signaled an interest in revisiting the issue, and test cases are making their way through the circuit courts. The time has come to reconsider Abood's fragile compromise. This Article offers a new way forward within the First Amendment, one that honors the importance of both union activity and free expression. It proposes a way to reconcile these twin interests while also updating the doctrine to account for state legislative efforts, modern union realities, and First Amendment jurisprudential developments. Specifically, the Article argues that agency fees should be brought into step with current political contribution and campaign finance jurisprudence. Under this approach, some agency fees "but only those that are "closely drawn" to avoid unnecessary expressive infringement" will remain lawful. This approach, a middle ground, may not satisfy those who ardently oppose agency fees of any kind, or those who want Abood's rule fully upheld. Still, it emerges as the best way forward through a difficult terrain: It avoids the false dichotomy between union and political activities, respects state legislatures that craft innovative collective bargaining statutes, and grounds public sector agency fees with other coherent aspects of First Amendment jurisprudence.
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期刊介绍: The Northwestern University Law Review is a student-operated journal that publishes four issues of high-quality, general legal scholarship each year. Student editors make the editorial and organizational decisions and select articles submitted by professors, judges, and practitioners, as well as student pieces.
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