On Senate Introduction of the Employee Free Choice Act

Thursday, March 29, 2007
 

For Immediate Release
Contact:
Caren Benjamin 202 637-5018

Statement by AFL-CIO President John Sweeney
On Senate Introduction of the Employee Free Choice Act
March 29, 2007

Working families can celebrate the fact that Senator Kennedy has introduced  the Employee Free Choice Act today in the Senate.  The Senate will now have  a chance to weigh in on the single most important piece of legislation to  help working people build a better life for themselves and their families.
 
The U.S. House of Representatives has paved the way for this momentous opportunity, voting by a wide margin to give working people a real chance to  unite with co-workers and bargain for better wages and benefits.  Working  families are encouraged that the Senate is moving this key legislation  forward in the first quarter of the year. 

A union card is the straightest ticket into a middle class lifestyle with a  decent standard of living and the ability to provide for your family. But  for too long now, working people have been denied the opportunity to have a  union because corporations flagrantly and routinely violate workers' freedom  to form unions, and the law is helpless to stop them. The result is an America where CEOs are showered with lavish pay packages while working  people are struggling to make ends meet.

It's fitting that this legislation was introduced on the same day as the media reported on a new economic analysis showing that per person, the top  earners in America make 440 times more than the average person in the bottom half of earners. That's nearly double the gap from 1980 and a key reason why the American middle class is rapidly disappearing.

The Employee Free Choice Act restores balance to the system of forming  unions and bargaining by giving employees not bosses the option of  deciding how they will freely choose whether to form a union.  The  legislation also creates real penalties for employers who illegally interfere with organizing efforts and sets up a system to ensure that workers get a first contract even if their employers refuse to bargain in good faith after the choice of the majority to unionize has been certified.

With the Employee Free Choice Act, the Senate has an historic chance to make  sure that America works the way it should for everyone.

 
 

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