Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions
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  1. #1
    Guest

    Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions

    http://www.news-press.com/article/20...news|text|Home

    They are going after all of us, and now they are trying to play the unions off of each other.

    Stand strong and fight these nasty republicans, they have become no better then the democrats.

  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
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    South St. Pete
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    187

    Re: Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions

    Unions mount mild but steady protest against stream of anti-union bills
    Mary Ellen Klas, St. Pete Times/Miami Herald

    As Republican lawmakers continue a steady drip of legislation aimed at tightening the rules for public employee unions in Florida, the unions did what they are known for Monday: they organized.

    First, the Florida Education Association trotted out its top legal scholar, Ron Meyer, to explain to reporters in a series of conference calls how Florida law can’t be compared to Wisconsin.

    The series of bills are part of a national agenda intended to weaken unions and are "aimed at side-stepping a very carefully crafted bargaining process in this state,'' Meyer said. Teachers, for one, won't be converging on the Capitol as in other states because state law prohibits them from any engaging in political activity during work hours. If they violate the law, it could cost them their pensions, their jobs and create fines against their unions.

    But, he warned, "What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. I think you’re going to see an awakening of the masses that are going to allow them to make their voices heard to bring forth these issues in a louder or clearer way.''



    Then, as the Senate Community Affairs Committee was slated to take up a bill that would prevent unions from using payroll deductions to collect union dues and would make it harder for them to use proceeds from dues for political activity, about two dozen protestors stood outside the hearing room with bright blue masking tape over their mouths. Their goal: to protest what they said was the "gag bill's" attempt to silence their political voice.

    “In Tallahassee, politicians shouldn’t try to tell me how to spend my money. It is my paycheck my choice,” said Jayne Walker, a supervisor of a city bus company from Central Florida and dues paying member of the Amalgamated Transit Workers union.

    “If this bill passes, the Chamber of Commerce, Associated Industries of Florida and all the other big businesses, special interests, will be the only voices in Florida politics. They have the right form assocociations, to pool their resources and participate in politics, and so should I and my fellow coworkers.”

    Scott Whittle, a high school teacher from Lincoln High School in Tallahassee, called the measure “revenge” by its sponsor, Sen. John Thrasher, who sponsored the bill last year to eliminate teacher tenure and impose strict new rules on performance pay.

    “He tried ramrod this down the taxpayers throats," Whittle said of the bill which was vetoed by then-Gov. Charlie Crist. “He wants to get back at the people, that’s why he wants no union involvement, no taxpayer money, no political activity.”

    The committee ran out of time to listen to testimony from workers who had traveled to town to speak to the bill, but Sen. Mike Bennett, a Bradenton Republican and committee chairman, promised to give the measure a hearing at the next meeting next week.

    Thrasher called the bill a simple measure intended to get the state out of the business of serving as the middle man in the dues collection process for union members.

    “The taxpayers of the State of Florida are basically saying let’s get out of the business of collecting dues for union members,’’ he said after the meeting adjourned. “Let the unions do it themselves. If they’re doing such a great job with their members, I think they’ll do fine.”

    Thrasher denied that the bill is intended to silence the unions by prohibiting payroll deductions for political activity. “What’s wrong with a state worker going to their bank or credit union and saying please deduct from my pay,’’ he said.

    “My intent clearly is the protect the taxpayer of the state of Florida,’’ he said. “I don’t think they want to be in the business of collecting union dues.”

    But Jeff McAdams, a Gainesville police officer and president of the Gainesville Fraternal Order of Police, called it a “union-busting bill” that “cuts the throats of police officers that are serving the public.”

    “When an officer uses force against someone, whether it’s legitimate or not, he is automatically investigated,’’ he said, “so the dues deduction allows them to have have their defense paid for.’’

    McAdams said it’s the clear legislators are targeting workers who voluntarily turn over a portion of their salaries to pay their dues to political activities and lobbying while taxpayers foot the bill for cities and counties to have lobbyists and they are not being told to stop.

    “It’s difficult enough doing the job we do on the street and we thought the legislature had our backs,’’ he said. “We find out that they don’t.”


    Daily Show: Crisis in Dairyland - For Richer and Poorer - Teachers and Wall Street
    http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/th...nd-wall-street

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
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    182

    Re: Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions

    I'm sure this isn't the only one of these that we're going to see...

    http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/rec...ick-scott-now/









    FD Bro'

  4. #4
    Guest

    Re: Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions

    Keep on voting in these elite Republicans who want to break your back and soon you'll be working for a few cents above minimum wage without benefits....look what happened to pilots. That was once a respectable career; no more. They work for pennies, fly at all hours with weird shifts.

    Rah rah Gov Scott! If you voted for this imbecile who should have been indicted and is now dismantling anything favorable to us working stiffs when you had the choice to vote for a moderate platform, you are guilty yourself. You could have voted for Alex Sink, a former bank president serving in a Republican cabinet without problems, and her running mate, a former prosecutor and state senator, Rod Smith. But noooo, you let the Democrat label scare you off.

  5. #5
    Guest

    Re: Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by Guest
    Keep on voting in these elite Republicans who want to break your back and soon you'll be working for a few cents above minimum wage without benefits....look what happened to pilots. That was once a respectable career; no more. They work for pennies, fly at all hours with weird shifts.

    Rah rah Gov Scott! If you voted for this imbecile who should have been indicted and is now dismantling anything favorable to us working stiffs when you had the choice to vote for a moderate platform, you are guilty yourself. You could have voted for Alex Sink, a former bank president serving in a Republican cabinet without problems, and her running mate, a former prosecutor and state senator, Rod Smith. But noooo, you let the Democrat label scare you off.
    You are a bunch of idiots. Since when did the FOP or PBA have any power at all? The only thing we get for our dues is an attorney if you are stupid enough to get into legal trouble, a small insurance policy and a steak dinner now and then that no one attends. If we get the "blue flu" we'd all be out on our asses. Everyone complains about their lack of clout and complain about the board members when the issue of raises come up but the truth is the "unions" here can't do squat. So what the hell are you complaining about when all the fiscally responsible politicians are trying to reighn in spending? At least we have jobs unlike the poor unemplyed - give it a break :roll:

  6. #6
    Guest

    Re: Florida Law Makers Take Aim At Busting Unions

    Far better off to get the fiscal affairs in order than to defend the status quo and watch the entire system implode and be left with nothing.
    And, as we can clearly see in Wisconsin, the minute it was no longer beneficial, those pro-union radicals turned on the LEOs up there in a flash. One minute, they were using the FOP to give them legitimacy, a minute later, they were yelling fascist and fighting.

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