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Union membership in Wisconsin declines 35%-60% two years after new law

Big Pimpin

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I ain't gonna work on Maggie's farm no more
In 2011, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed a law that allowed state and local public employees to opt out of paying dues into public unions, required higher payments into health care and retirement pensions, and also stipulated that public unions had to hold annual recertification votes.

The law prompted dramatic protests around the state from public employee unions, as well as legal challenges that ended in June 2011 when the Wisconsin State Supreme Court upheld the law. Political challenges continued, however, and were not turned back until a year later, when Governor Walker won a strong victory in a June 2012 recall election forced by opponents of his union reforms.

Walker's legal and political victories have lead to a dramatic decline in Wisconsion public union membership, as the Washington Examiner reported on Friday. Citing recent Labor Department filings, the Examiner noted that "membership at Wisconsin?s American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 40 ? one of AFSCME?s four branches in the state ? has gone from the 31,730 it reported in 2011, to 29,777 in 2012, to just 20,488 now." This decline of 11,242 members in two years represents a 35% membership drop since Walker's law passed.

In addition membership in "Wisconsin?s AFSCME Council 48, which represents city and county workers in Milwaukee County, went from 9,043 members in 2011, to 6,046 in 2012, to just 3,498 now." The loss here has been even more steep, a decline of 5,545 members in two years, or more than 60%.

Data on the two other Wisconsin AFSCME councils are not reported to the Department of Labor, since they do not represent any private sector unions.

Union membership has been on the decline for decades. In 1983, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 20% of American workers belonged to a union, but by 2012 that number had declined to 11%. That drop has been greatest in the private sector. In 2012 the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that "union membership in the private sector was much lower, 6.6% of total workers versus the 35.9% of total workers in the public sector."

When public employees are given the freedom to choose, the Wisconsin experience indicates that the private sector trend of diminished union membership will also extend into the public sector.
 
Just the swing of the pendulum

Do you mean union membership will swing back the other way? An increase in union membership?

If so, present the facts showing the union membership swings over the past three decades.
 
What are the figures for the amount of jobs crated since that law went into effect?
 
What are the figures for the amount of jobs crated since that law went into effect?

Good question.

Seems like I read Big Business started moving into Indiana after Indiana recently became a RTW state.

Here's another twist. Tennessee is a RTW state which has both an older Nissan truck plant and newer VW plant. The VW plant could possibly become union in the near future....with the blessing of VW. Apparently VW is unionized in Europe and they have good relations with the union overseas.

Just as you can have shit companies, you can have shit unions and I think over years, the UAW became too greedy and inflexible just like some of these state unions have. Its all fun and games when the economy is booming but I'm sorry, when revenue drops 30+++% like it did in 2009, you got to take the good with the bad and give something up because only the fed govt can print money.
 
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