Labor Department Strengthens Transparency Rules for Unions

Rob Bluey /

Next week the Labor Department will propose changes to its union financial reporting and disclosure requirements in an effort to improve transparency and accountability. The proposed rule will give rank-and-file union members more information about union finances. It is the latest effort by the Bush administration to increase transparency for labor unions after years of decline during the Clinton administration. (Visit UnionReports.gov for more information.)

The proposed rule modifies a 2003 change to the LM-2 form, which is required for unions with annual receipts of $250,000 or more. It also implements a longstanding provision of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act that requires unions that ordinarily file the simplified LM-3 form to instead file an LM-2 under certain limited circumstances, according to the department.

The change comes eight months before President Bush leaves office. With presidential candidate Barack Obama suggesting that his administration would impose less oversight on unions, the proposed rule is both significant and symbolic.

The Labor Department outlined five reasons why the changes were being proposed:

UPDATE — May 12, 10:38 a.m.: The Washington Examiner editorializes on Elaine Chao’s legacy at the Labor Department. Chao, a former distinguished fellow at Heritage, has led the department at “a time when transparency and accountability in union finances finally began to be taken seriously,” according to the newspaper.