Current:Home > MarketsIllinois House speaker’s staff sues to unionize -MarketEdge
Illinois House speaker’s staff sues to unionize
View
Date:2025-04-25 19:22:16
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Staff members for the Illinois House speaker on Friday filed a lawsuit demanding the right to negotiate working conditions as a union, something the speaker has said he supports.
The action by members of the Illinois Legislative Staff Association in Cook County Circuit Court seeks confirmation that they have a right to “organize and bargain collectively,” as was guaranteed to all workers by an amendment to the state Constitution in 2022.
It also seeks injunctive relief compelling House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch to take steps to negotiate or for a mediator to step in, and it wants the court to order Welch to communicate by a public post or mail to employees assuring them of their right to unionize. Members said Welch has been recalcitrant since they first sought negotiations in November 2022.
Welch sponsored legislation last fall to allow staff to unionize, but the measure didn’t make it through the Senate and it has received pushback from the association because it wouldn’t take effect until next year.
“Speaker Welch says he was ‘proud’ to stand with us back in October — while the cameras were rolling and the people were watching,” the association, which is made up of about 33 legislative coordinators, policy analysts and communications specialists, said in a statement. “Unfortunately, he was also too proud to sit down and work with us once his publicity stunt was over.”
Welch spokesperson Jaclyn Driscoll said no one in the speaker’s office had received a copy of the lawsuit and declined comment.
Legislative aides work long hours for wages that start in the $40,000 range. They research and write dense, complicated legislation, ensuring lawmakers are prepared to present and defend them while tracking their progress and keeping appraised of opposition.
After Oregon legislative staff became the first in the nation to unionize in 2021, the movement has gained momentum. California endorsed collective bargaining last fall. In Washington state, House and Senate Democratic staffers filed paperwork this month to organize.
Welch, a Democrat from Hillside who has been at the helm since 2021, pushed through legislation last fall that would allow his staff to organize — beginning in July 2026. He said it was necessary because state labor law prohibits unionization by “public employees.” But the Senate didn’t take any action on the legislation.
Before the legislation was introduced, the association said Welch’s staff decreed it couldn’t negotiate with the employees unless their union was recognized by the Illinois State Labor Relations Board. But the board has no jurisdiction over legislative staff and as a result denied their petition to be recognized.
Now, the speaker’s office says it can’t negotiate with the staff unless the Senate approves Welch’s legislation and it’s signed into law. But even if it became law, the association asserts it violates workers’ rights because it delays unionization until next year.
It also lumps Welch’s staff in with legislative aides assigned to the Republican caucus, who are “hired by a different employer, so as to make it potentially impossible for the Speaker to claim authority to conduct bargaining.”
veryGood! (25418)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Phones are distracting students in class. More states are pressing schools to ban them
- Book excerpt: What Have We Here? by Billy Dee Williams
- Consumer Reports' top 10 car picks for 2024: Why plug-in hybrids are this year's star
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- US Army is slashing thousands of jobs in major revamp to prepare for future wars
- Sex, violence, 'Game of Thrones'-style power grabs — the new 'Shōgun' has it all
- NFL scouting combine is here. But there was another you may have missed: the HBCU combine
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Review: Dazzling 'Shogun' is the genuine TV epic you've been waiting for
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Moon landing goes sideways: Odysseus mission will be cut short after craft tipped over
- NFL rumors: Three teams interested in Justin Fields, Justin Jefferson news and more
- Monty Williams rips officials after 'worst call of season' costs Detroit Pistons; ref admits fault
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Notable numbers capture the wild weather hitting much of the US this week
- Monty Williams rips officials after 'worst call of season' costs Detroit Pistons; ref admits fault
- Jacob Rothschild, financier from a family banking dynasty, dies at 87
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Musher who was disqualified, then reinstated, now withdraws from the Iditarod race across Alaska
President Joe Biden makes surprise appearance on 'Late Night with Seth Meyers' for show's 10th anniversary
Indiana justices, elections board kick GOP US Senate candidate off primary ballot
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
West Virginia man sentenced to life for killing girlfriend’s 4-year-old son
UAW says a majority of workers at an Alabama Mercedes plant have signed cards supporting the union
Disney sued after, family says, NYU doctor died from allergic reaction to restaurant meal