{"id":528,"date":"2025-04-01T11:05:00","date_gmt":"2025-04-01T11:05:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spanishliteratureintranslation.com\/?p=528"},"modified":"2025-04-03T21:09:42","modified_gmt":"2025-04-03T21:09:42","slug":"editorial-polis-is-right-lets-find-a-compromise-that-preserves-the-labor-peace-act","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/spanishliteratureintranslation.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/01\/editorial-polis-is-right-lets-find-a-compromise-that-preserves-the-labor-peace-act\/","title":{"rendered":"Editorial: Polis is right. Let\u2019s find a compromise that preserves the Labor Peace Act."},"content":{"rendered":"
Gov. Jared Polis is right to promise a veto on Senate Bill 5 unless a compromise is found between unions and businesses that can be carried forward by lawmakers looking to make it easier for unions to organize labor in Colorado<\/a>.<\/p>\n Forcing an agreement on any changes to the Labor Peace Act is essential for Colorado as we navigate this turbulent political and economic time.<\/p>\n Unions are already active in Colorado, but union leaders say a provision of the 1943 Labor Peace Act that requires a second vote \u2013 with a 75% threshold — to collect \u201cunion fees\u201d is stifling the hard work of organizing employees so they can join a union and collectively bargain for better pay, working conditions and benefits.<\/p>\n Of course, employers point out that workers can already organize with a single vote of 50% and collect from every employee\u2019s paycheck who joins the union, \u201cunion dues\u201d that are used to cover the costs of the union\u2019s work representing workers during collective bargaining. Employees should be the ones to decide if \u201cunion fees\u201d are also taken from every employee’s hard-earned paycheck, whether they join the union or not.<\/p>\n Colorado Democrats are proposing that the state\u2019s law be updated to allow unions to collect \u201cfees\u201d without a second vote of the union to approve the non-bargaining activities.<\/p>\n Big unions are less likely to come into Colorado to help workers organize than they are to spend time in states where a single vote also authorizes the union fees, which are seen as essential for funding big-union activities that include things like lobbying for a change to the Labor Peace Act.<\/p>\n