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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Sanchez, M.
Original Date
Last Updated
1/22/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Support Federal Employees Free Choice Act
SJM 24
ANALYST Cox
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Joint Memorial 24 requests support of the Employee Free Choice Act. This Act would
authorize the National Labor Relations Board to certify a union as the bargaining representative
when a majority of employees voluntarily signs authorization cards designating that union to
represent them.
This Joint Resolution requests that the legislature of the State of New Mexico provide for first-
contract mediation and arbitration and establish meaningful penalties for violations of a worker's
freedom to choose a union.
The Joint Resolution further requests that the legislature of the state of New Mexico urge
Congress to pass the Employee Free Choice Act to protect and preserve for America's workers
their freedom to choose for themselves whether or not to form a union.
The Joint Memorial requests that copies of this memorial be transmitted to the New Mexico
Congressional delegation and to the Governor.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 24 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Senate Joint Memorial States that:
In 1935 the United States established by law that workers must be free to form unions;
and
the free choice to join with others and bargain for better wages and benefits is essential to
economic opportunity and good living standards; and
unions benefit communities by strengthening living standards, stabilizing tax bases,
promoting equal treatment and enhancing civic participation; and
States in which more people are union members are states with higher wages, better
benefits and better schools; and
unions help raise workers' pay and narrow the income gap for minorities and women by
increasing median weekly earnings by thirty-one percent for union female workers,
thirty-six percent for African American workers, forty-six percent for Latino workers and
eight percent for Asian American workers; and
workers are also more likely to have health coverage and guaranteed defined-benefit
pensions in union jobs;
and eighty percent of private-sector union workers have employer-provided health
insurance compared with only forty-nine percent of nonunion workers and sixty-eight
percent of union workers have defined-benefit pension plans compared with fourteen
percent of nonunion workers; and
workers across the nation are routinely denied the freedom to form unions and bargain for
a better life, with twenty-five percent of private-sector employers illegally firing at least
one worker for union activity during organizing campaigns; and
seventy-seven percent of the public believes it is important to have strong laws protecting
the freedom of workers to make their own decisions about having a union, and sixty
percent of workers would join a union if they had the chance; and
employers often refuse to bargain fairly after workers form a union by dragging out first-
contract bargaining for up to two years in forty-five percent of successful campaigns; and
each year millions of dollars are spent to frustrate workers' efforts to form unions, and
ninety-two percent of private-sector employers force employees to attend mandatory anti-
union meetings; and
when the right of workers to form a union is violated, wages fall, race and gender pay
gaps widen, workplace discrimination increases and job safety standards disappear; and
a worker's fundamental right to choose a union without coercion and intimidation is a
public issue that requires public policy solutions, including legislative remedies; and
the federal Employee Free Choice Act received majority support in both houses of
congress in 2007 but was defeated by a minority of senators; and
the Employee Free Choice Act will safeguard workers' rights to make their own decisions
about forming a union, provide for first-contract mediation and arbitration and establish
meaningful penalties when employers violate workers' rights;
PRC/mt