PEWAUKEE, Wisconsin – The International Union of Operating Engineers Locals 139 and 420 filed a federal lawsuit seeking to invalidate Wisconsin’s infamous Act 10, a law passed in 2011 that drastically restricted the bargaining rights of public employees.
The plaintiffs argue Act 10 violates free speech and free association under the First Amendment. Janus v. AFSCME and other recent lawsuits have led Supreme Court Justices to suggest that collective bargaining by public employees is classified as political speech, and is therefore protected by the First Amendment. As protected free speech, a status collective bargaining has never held before, it is unconstitutional to restrict who can bargain collectively or what subjects are permissive for bargaining.
The lawsuit states that “Act 10 is a content-based restriction infringing on Plaintiffs’ right to free speech.” Among its many restrictions, Act 10 prohibited public employees from bargaining over “any factor or condition of employment except wages…”
“The organizations supporting the Plaintiff in Janus case are seeking to weaken unions, but a ‘victory’ in this instance will have broad unintended consequences,” said IUOE Local 139 President-Business Manager Terrence McGowan. “If collective bargaining is elevated to a constitutional right, anything resembling a limitation will be ripe for legal challenge, and those challenges will come quickly.”
“Public employees’ livelihoods have been under attack for seven years under Act 10,” said IUOE Local 420 Business Manager Mark Maierle. “By failing to consider the consequences of applying free speech protections to collective bargaining, anti-union interests have left the door open for public employees to negotiate for increases to wages, pensions, and healthcare benefits.”
*** The International Union of Operating Engineers Local 139 represents almost 10,000 working men and women in Wisconsin, primarily employed in the construction industry. IUOE 420 represents 1,600 members in Wisconsin, primarily employed in the public sector.