Alaska Moves to Comply With Supreme Court on Deducting Union Dues
Kevin Mooney /
Alaska’s labor policies need a “course correction” to ensure the First Amendment rights of public employees are protected under a recent Supreme Court ruling, the state’s attorney general has told Gov. Michael Dunleavy in a legal opinion.
Because public sector employers no longer are permitted to deduct labor union dues or fees from an employee’s paycheck without that employee’s “affirmative consent,” the state’s payroll deduction system “fails to satisfy constitutional standards,” Alaska Attorney General Kevin G. Clarkson says in the written opinion dated Tuesday.
Clarkson recommends to Dunleavy that Alaska implement a new payroll deduction system to ensure that a government employee “freely consents” to payroll deductions for union fees, and does so in a “knowing, intelligent, and voluntary” manner.
In response to the 12-page opinion, which he requested, Dunleavy said it “clearly articulates” that Alaska doesn’t comply with the Supreme Court’s ruling.
“In the coming days and weeks, my administration will be working to ensure the state is in full compliance of the law and that Alaskans are informed of their rights,” the governor said in a press release.
Clarkson and Dunleavy are Republicans who took office in December.
Six months earlier, in June 2018, the Supreme Court ruled in Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees that “agency shop” laws requiring nonunion government workers to pay union fees violate the First Amendment rights of those who object to the union’s political agenda.
The high court’s ruling affects about 5 million government employees in 22 states who no longer are required either to join a union or pay related fees as a condition of employment.
Mark Janus, a child support specialist at the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, was the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit.
The states most affected by the ruling include those, such as Alaska, that are not already right-to-work states.
Dunleavy’s predecessor as governor, William Walker, a former Republican who became an Independent in 2014, dropped out of his re-election race in October and endorsed Democrat Mark Begich.
The Janus decision “invalidated” a provision of the state’s Public Employee Relations Act, which “assigns public employers the task of deducting from their employees’ wages any dues, fees, or other benefits and transmitting these funds to the union, if the employee provides written authorization to do so,” Clarkson says in the legal opinion.
But because Alaska allowed certain collective bargaining provisions to remain in place that “effectively ceded to the unions widespread power to elicit employees’ consent to payroll deductions and fees,” the attorney general concludes, the state’s payroll deduction process is “constitutionally untenable.”
The current system allows the unions to design the form by which an employee gives written authorization for payroll deductions. But there is no guarantee that the unions’ forms clearly identify—let alone explain—the employee’s First Amendment right not to authorize any payroll deductions to subsidize the unions’ speech.
Clarkson also makes the point that “because the unions control the environment in which the employee is asked to authorize a payroll deduction, there is no guarantee that an employee’s authorization is ‘freely given.’”
“For example,” he writes, “some collective bargaining agreements require new employees to report to the union office within a certain period of time, where a union representative presents the new hire with the payroll deduction form.”
This is a problem, the attorney general says, because the union’s process “is essentially a black box” that the state can’t examine, and it “has no way of knowing whether the signed form is ‘the product of a free and deliberate choice rather than coercion or improper inducement.’”
Without this knowledge, he writes, Alaska “lacks ‘clear and compelling evidence’ that the employee’s consent to have union dues and fees deducted from his or her paycheck was ‘freely given.’”
The attorney general adds:
The importance of assuring that an employee gives knowing consent, and the risk of obtaining uninformed waivers under the current state payroll deduction system, is all the more apparent when unions add specific terms to an employee’s payroll deduction authorization, like making the payroll deduction irrevocable for up to 12 months.
Justice Samuel Alito, who wrote the high court’s majority opinion in Janus, made it clear that public employees should be permitted to affirmatively opt in to paying union dues, rather than having to navigate their way through a process of opting out.
Alaska’s governor has the authority to ensure that an employee’s consent is up to date, and that his or her First Amendment rights are secure, Clarkson tells Dunleavy.
The attorney general also recommends that Alaska give regular opportunities to government employees either to opt in if they decide they want to support a union’s speech or to opt out if they decide they no longer support the union’s position.
He recommends that the state provide for a regular opt-in period for employees to decide whether they “want to waive their First Amendment rights by authorizing future deductions from their wages.”
Using an administrative order, the attorney general writes, the governor may identify a period of one year as the “appropriate amount of time” for an employee’s waiver of First Amendment rights to remain in effect.
Clarkson’s entire opinion is available here.