The two major teachers unions have been anticipating a negative decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Janus case since Trump added far-right Justice Neil Gorsuch to the Court.
Janus is a public employee in Illinois who enjoys the benefits of union membership but doesn’t want to pay dues. He says that compelling him to pay any dues to the union violates his rights, although he has no objection to obtaining the higher salary and pension benefits that the union wins for him.
Some conservatives hope the Janus decision is a death knell for unions, who supply funding to liberal causes and candidates. Other observers think that a negative decision will bring rejuvenation to the unions and compel them to get closer to their members and fight for their loyalty.
A recent article in Education Week summed up the pluses and minuses.
The U.S. Supreme Court is poised to deliver a major blow to teachers’ unions in the coming months: Teachers in about half of states may no longer have to pay mandatory fees if they’re not union members, which could cause drops in both revenue and membership.
There’s national speculation about what this all could mean—while observers say this case won’t be unions’ demise, it could cause the political juggernauts to lose some power. And some teachers are wondering whether this will signal a shift in how teachers’ unions operate.
At stake in Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council 31 are the so-called “agency” or “fair-share” fees that public-employee unions in 22 states charge to workers who choose not to join but are still represented in collective bargaining. The plaintiff in the case argues that these policies violate free speech—he is forced to pay money to a group that advocates for causes he does not support. The unions say all workers gain from the bargaining they do for salaries and other benefits, so paying a fee for that is only fair.
The case, for which oral arguments will be delivered later this month, would affect all public-employee unions, including the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, and their state and local affiliates. With the confirmation of President Donald Trump’s nominee, Neil M. Gorsuch, to the Supreme Court, many analysts, onlookers, and some union representatives themselves predict that the justices will rule in Janus’ favor.
If that happens, teachers’ unions could see a decrease in membership over the next few years, analysts say. That’s because many who pay agency fees decide to simply kick in the extra dollars to become full members. The unions would also lose the revenues generated by those agency fees, which could result in a reduction of union staff members. The NEA has about 88,000 agency fee payers, while the AFT has about 94,000—small percentages of the total number of teachers they represent.
“We should expect to see unions lose some of their sway in policymaking,” said Katharine Strunk, a professor of education policy at Michigan State University. “If we feel like the union power really is associated with resources and funds, … you might expect to see that unions are less able to put up a fight, and we’d see more of these policies [that they have been advocating for, including around tenure and teacher evaluations] flip.”
For Randi Weingarten, the AFT president, the case is an ideological attempt to minimize—even eviscerate—the impact teachers’ unions have.
Union opposers “have no interest in helping school teachers,” she said. “They just want to deplete our membership….”
Yet onlookers caution that an unfavorable ruling would be a shock to the system for unions, not a death knell.
“Could this put teachers’ unions out of business? No. Not close,” said Charles Taylor Kerchner, a professor emeritus and senior research fellow of educational studies at Claremont Graduate University in California. “Unions can go to grass roots and get back to constant organizing fairly quickly. It might drive unions to get closer to their core, to get closer to their members, and to be sort of more in touch with what’s going on.”
Knocking on Doors
Indeed, teachers’ unions in agency-fee states have already started recruiting educators to become full members and retain their memberships regardless of the Supreme Court ruling.
“When people get that this is a ‘Whose side are you on?’ moment, and what the proponents of this case are trying to do, they get really, really mad,” Weingarten said, adding that local affiliate leaders have been having one-on-one conversations with members.
In Minnesota, more than 1,200 fair-share fee payers have become full members since September, when Education Minnesota launched a campaign to inform teachers about the effects of Janus, said Denise Specht, the union’s president. Most of those teachers, she said, didn’t realize they weren’t full members….
John Troutman McCrann, a high school math teacher in New York City, who is also the leader of the union chapter for his school, has been working to engage teachers to make sure they feel represented by their union. His fear is that if educators don’t have to pay agency fees, many teachers would become free riders.
“We’re not going to have some classes with 40 students and some classes with 33,” McCrann said. “Folks who don’t pay union dues are going to get the benefits of what we’ve been working for.”
In California, 10 percent of teachers are agency-fee payers, said Eric Heins, the president of the California Teachers Association.
In conversations, representatives of local affiliates have learned that some of those teachers hadn’t joined because they didn’t know what the union did, Heins said.
“It’s a good wake-up call, when you have threats like this, to refocus,” Heins said.
When Lily Eskelsen-García, the NEA president, was a teacher in Utah, her school’s union meetings were open to members and non-members alike, she said.
“It was a chance for us to say, ‘Do you see who we are? Do you see what we’re trying to do? Do you see why you’re important?” Eskelsen-García said.
That kind of outreach, which sometimes leads people to join, needs to happen more often, she said.
Some say Janus could be an opportunity for educators to rethink what unions should look like.
“I think a lot of people don’t feel very engaged or don’t feel very integral [to] their own union,” said Kathleen Melville, a 9th grade teacher in Philadelphia who is active in her local affiliate.
She has been talking to her colleagues about the value of being a union member. “I’ve never met a teacher who said, ‘I want less in benefits or to get paid less,'” she said. “Every member we lose is power we lose at the bargaining table.”
‘Do They Represent Me? No’
A nationally representative survey of 537 teachers by the Education Week Research Center found that 14 percent of teachers said the union represents their political views “not at all.” About 20 percent said “only a little.”
Bruce Aster, a high school history teacher in Carlsbad, Calif., doesn’t feel represented at all by his union—a frustration that spurred him to sign on to an amicus brief with a half-dozen other California educators arguing on behalf of Janus.
“Golly, do [unions] represent me? No,” Aster said. “I would be content and probably welcome them representing me on pure workplace stuff.”
Instead, Aster pays around $1,100 a year in fair-share fees and receives a refund of about $400—the amount of his fees that the union would have used for non-collective bargaining activities. Even though he’s not contributing toward overtly political activities, Aster said he disagrees with much of what the union deems important, even for bargaining purposes.
Tim Erickson, a special education teacher in Detroit Lakes, Minn., doesn’t always support the unions’ politics and positions, but plans to remain a member no matter what the Supreme Court decides.
“The devil I know is better than the devil I don’t know,” he said, adding that his union has helped negotiate smaller class sizes and better working conditions. “If that union goes away, holy smokes, are we going to see drastic changes in education.”
While some teachers say they wish the unions would stay out of politics, union leaders argue education is inherently political, making it critical that they take stances on candidates and issues that affect their members.
“Politics makes a difference … in our classrooms and our professional lives,” said Heins, the CTA president. “And to not be engaged in that would be irresponsible.”
What Comes Next?
As union leaders brace for a ruling likely to be delivered this spring, educators and analysts alike are imagining what the groups will look like, post-Janus.
“Maybe it will [inspire] union reform—or maybe people will create from within unions that truly just represent on workforce issues,” said Aster.
And Melville, the Philadelphia teacher who supports the union, said she hopes that teachers’ unions will shift to be more democratic and engage in more grass-roots activities.
Not everyone foresees unions becoming more responsive to members. “It’s very difficult for me to imagine a group of partisan Democrats saying we need to pay more attention to what Republicans are saying,” said Antonucci, the analyst, referring to the fact that union leaders tend to be liberal while members are more mixed.
Ultimately, though, teachers’ unions aren’t going anywhere, analysts say.
“Unions have always had severe ups and downs,” said Kerchner, the Claremont research fellow. “They have been counted out many, many times, and they tend to come back. People have a legitimate interest in a desire to organize around things that they care about—like their job, like some sort of sense of social justice—and unions are a pretty good vehicle for that.”

Let the non-members lose the right to union pay scale & all other union-negotiated benefits, & each negotiate individually for pay, work conditions, & benefits. Some people today seem to forget that there were reasons unions were established.
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My rants supporting the elimination of mandatory dues (agency fees) is based on my desire to strengthen unions. By strengthening unions I mean unions that vigorously support their members if they are to survive. The UFT in NYC is more of a service organization than a union that protects its teachers. Its primary goal appears to be the preservation of the leader’s positions/healthy salaries with the guaranteed income stream.
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That’s a dumb way to do what you want, have you forgotten that you vote your leadership in or out? In addition, mandatory dues have nothing at all to do with rank and files dissatisfaction with leadership. They only prevent free riders on the unions coat tails. Your narrative sounds like trollish propaganda to me, straight out of the union busters playbook.
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I am a UFT retiree. One needs to look no further than the 2005 contract that eliminated seniority transfer rights coupled with decentralizing the budget that put higher cost veterans in the crosshairs. Complete sellout by the UFT to Bloomberg to cut cost at all costs. Think ATR pool.
How about Michael Mulgrew’s statement that he would “punch in the mouth” anyone who opposed the Common Core standards then reversed himself and claimed victory when the Common Core standards lost support????
How about Michael Mulgrew’s complete silence at an annual meeting in 2009 when two veteran teachers with 32 & 37 years experience received their first “U” ratings. They stated that the union was no help so they hired their own lawyers and ultimately won in court. Pathetic.
How about Randi Weingarten serving on an education foundation created and led by Eli Broad, the utterly anti union/public school billionaire????
How about Randi Weingarten AFT president accepting 15 million from Bill Gates to promote the failed Common Core curriculum???? Liliy Eskelsen-Garcia accepted 25 million for the NEA to suppoprt the Common Core nonsense.
I could go on but it seems that I am replying to a UFT employee rather than someone in the classroom.
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One more thing speaking of dumb. Did it ever occur to you to ask why a UFT president NEVER served out their term to completion when they planned to retire from the presidency? Why do you suppose they always appointed a UFT favorite as an interim acting about 6 months prior to the next UFT election for president. The number one predictor of victory in elections is incumbency. By appointing an interim acting with significant time remaining to the next election the interim acting becomes the incumbent.
Time for a change.
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Yes, Michael, you are absolutely right about Randi Weingarten’s betrayals (since continued by her empty-suit replacement, Michael Mulgrew) of NYC teachers as head of the UFT, which leads me to conclude that she is far more concerned about what happened in West Virginia, where the teachers disregarded a weak/fearful and out-of-touch union leadership and kept on striking, than she is of Janus.
Unity Caucus, which has led the UFT as a mostly single-party state for over half a century, is worried, rightfully so, about Janus, but an informed and active rank and file is what really terrifies them, because it’s a more dangerous (and long-needed) threat to their longstanding control of the union.
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I should have added that, despite Weingarten’s failures/betrayals, UFT members should continue paying dues and take back their union.
Even a bad union is better than no union at all.
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Thank you for this enlightening conversation. I’m a parent, but I have a very hard time reconciling some of the extremely harsh criticisms I read about Randi Weingarten and other union leadership with the worry about the Janus decision.
As an outsider – and a parent – it sometimes seems to me that the union isn’t doing what it should and so what if it get dissolved. Maybe that’s a good thing to just get rid of the union.
Here is the irony: I just read what I wrote and I sound just like the critics of the Democratic Party who say that it’s so useless and corrupt that it should just be abandoned. And I’m always taking the other side and saying “wait, don’t throw out the entire democratic party and don’t you see how dangerous it is when you are maligning and defaming the entire party and everyone in it?”
So do you feel similarly about unions? Right now, the word “union” has a very negative connotation for many Americans. It symbolizes every complaint you made in this discussion, and they apply it to ALL union members. So the public support for a teacher’s union dwindles.
It the union worth saving? Are there good people in it working to change it and make it better? Is it unfair to make sweeping attacks on teachers unions when their leadership has been imperfect?
And maybe the answer is the same for unions and the democratic party. They may have some flawed leadership, but that leadership has also done some good things and there are many people there fighting the good fight to make it better. And they have a harder time, not an easier time, when the entire union is viewed as a corrupt useless organization that offers nothing good.
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Fiorillo, you are spot on, as usual. Weingarten is a fraud.
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So let me get this straight . I am having a difficult time understanding this . You are unable to muster the support within the rank and file to remove the leadership that you feel has made too many concessions .
Yet you feel that you somehow, once the union is decertified ;(so to speak because these are state decisions not covered by the NLRA) .
you will be able to muster the the support to do battle against the same state that forced the Union into concessions in the first place .
Good luck with that . !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Before I reply, are you in the classroom full time or do you work for the UFT or some other union either part time or full time.
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Gee Mike I am not a teacher at all . Not a union leader at all . Yet I have been an active member of what was formally one of the most powerful unions in NY and the country . In fact the Union that brought collective bargaining to the UFT ( if you go to the UFT web site and check the history you can figure it out ) . I have watched the power dynamics of American Unionism as an outsider near the inside for 42 years . The dynamic you are talking about in the AFT has a long history in the Labor movement . The concessions are part of a “Value on Display ” model that seeks to show employers the benefits of employing Union workers due to their training , the quality they produce …… They are more than willing to make concessions in certain areas like drug testing, or work rules in exchange for other concessions on employer demands . Of course this is out of weakness not strength.
The problem with the labor movement in this country is that it stopped being a broad based social movement sometime around the 1960’s . The problem may have been inherent from the early days of American Unionism near the turn of the last century .
What little is left of that broad based movement is pathetically weak . So weak that in a City of 50k +- active UFT members, I seem to recall very few from that organization showing up to support the fight for 15.
Almost none last Saturday to protest Janus at Foley Sq. ………….
Sorry my friend the membership gets the leadership it deserves and the leadership gets the membership it deserves . The leadership will only go as far as it feels the membership is willing to go .
So if you are not willing to show up for a Demonstration not willing to pay dues ,lets stop pretending . People put their bodies on the line for the labor movement in the past . It may be part of the genetic history of those teachers in West Virginia and it is the seed of a more broad based movement; if it does not end with a measly 5% raise in a state that needs a whole lot more. Those teachers were out there and those Republican legislators made what ever concessions they did, knowing that the same populist anger that delivered Trump was about to be turned on them State wide . Of course as has become practice they are already seeking other ways to further cripple those teachers .
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It is possible and not as high a lift as one might think. Rmember that the CTU in Chicago got a 98% strike authorization vote from membership after the scum in the Illinois legislature made 75% the threshold, never imagining how unified teachers would be. WV followed that example and improved upon it since they were a non bargaining state. The attacks on the teaching profession have produced anger and greater unity. Teachers, who are our education first responders, will not give up without a fierce fight.
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Could you imagine the chaos that would ensue if EVERY person in a labor union walked out for just 1 single day. Police, fire fighters, teachers, auto workers, nurses etc etc. The politicians would have to look at what they have done to the taxpayers of this country. The 1% wouldn’t be able to survive without 99%.
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I’ve heard that UPS is thinking about a nationwide strike if this passes…the country would come to a stand still as fedex will no longer handle bulk freight.
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Teachers in West Virginia conducted a wildcat strike and won despite opposition by union leaders. As for Chicago Karen Lewis was a union leader in the truest sense which is not what Randi Weingarten (AFT), Lily Eskelsen-Garcis (NEA), and Michael Mulgrew (UFT) are. Agency fees led union leaders to not rock the boat with real agitation such as strikes. There was no need to since their lofty salaries were guaranteed by agency fees.
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Sounds good Janus will not be the spark . A Kent State type incident at a labor demonstration would possibly be !!?? . Our labor history is not a pretty one . The Triangle Square Fire did more for the labor movement than any previous job actions. Even when they were violent, as that false equivalence has a long history. In a press owned by the oligarchy.
As Johnson said to King ” Show us something that a farmer on his tractor in Iowa says that ain’t right”
Where we are today that may be a long stretch .
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My school is a bit of an anomaly, we are a right to work school (in IL). It’s just always been that way. Some teachers only join up the years we vote, others are always in, and some take year or two off, if they have heavy financial burdens, like kids in college. It has just always been that way here and it works for us. We always have more than half the teachers as members and we have pretty good benefits. I’ve only seen a state union rep once, in all the years I’ve been here. So, if the law does change, I don’t see a lot of problems, except maybe unions will have to pair down on some of the bureaucracy at the state level.
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You’re lucky that you have more than 50% membership. Utah, which has been right to work (for less) since the 1950s, often has far fewer union members per school. Without enough support, there is little the union can do to help us. My school is less than 25% union membership. And our membership only costs $60.00 a month.
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BINGO
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A proud union member!
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The article link below to a NYTimes article about the WV strike has this insight:
“Unions have tended throughout most of their histories to be forces that seek stability, not unrest,” said Joseph A. McCartin, a labor historian at Georgetown University. “When they are weakened, we’re more likely to see the re-emergence of instability and militancy, and the kind of model that we’re seeing happen in West Virginia.”
That model, driven by grass-roots anger, can flummox politicians. Mitch Carmichael, the Republican president of the West Virginia Senate, opposes collective bargaining for public employees, but he acknowledged that the decentralized aspects of the strike made it difficult to reach a settlement that would satisfy the teachers.
“You’re not negotiating with a particular, a unique set of participants,” Mr. Carmichael said. “There’s just this organic sort of — I don’t know what to call it. More like an uprising.”
If Janus becomes the law of the land, flummoxed politicians will wish they had Randi Weingarten to deal with….
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Make no mistake that state wide strike was not organic . Of course I have no verifiable inside knowledge of the the validity of the statement I just made . If I did, you could burn me at the stake and I wouldn’t tell. Because the answer to Janus is to be found in the same 1st amendment that the Right is using to crush unions. Since 1947 it has been illegal for private sector unions, not workers to participate in actions that are not directed at their employer . The states have their own laws which abridge the rights of workers to collectively have agency.
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
When the Government restricts through the Commerce Clause the rights of people to assemble and protest conditions . Effectively they are making Government the one who is restricting their rights to assemble .
If the Court can rule for Janus and then rule against secondary boycotts or the rights to withhold ones labor collectively . Than it is time to end this charade .
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