Desperate times call for desperate measures, but the union movement has taken this saying to a new level. It has reacted to dwindling membership by unionizing recipients of public assistance. In more than a dozen states, unions now extract dues from government benefit checks.
The latest example is Minnesota. The Legislature just passed a law unionizing day care providers at the behest of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME).
Employees of large Minnesota day care centers could already unionize. This bill applies to self-employed day care providers, many of whom run day care centers out of their homes.
Self-employed workers don't normally unionize. What could a union do, demand that someone pay himself more? Have its members strike against themselves? A union of one makes little sense.
However, Minnesota funds a Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) that subsidizes day care costs for low-income families. The Legislature just defined day care providers receiving CCAP payments as state employees — but only for the purpose of collective bargaining. This will let AFSCME form a giant statewide union of at-home day care center operators.
It's hard to see how this benefits the day care providers. The law lets AFSCME bargain over subsidy rates, but not the amount Minnesota spends on CCAP. Any increase in rates will come at the cost of fewer families using subsidized day care. The union cannot increase the day care providers' overall incomes. Day care providers have complained that AFSCME is being "self-serving."
The law certainly benefits the union. The state will deduct mandatory union dues out of CCAP payments.
Hundreds of dollars in annual dues from more than 10,000 day care providers works out to a lot of money. The net effect: AFSCME siphons millions of dollars from self-employed day care operators into its coffers, while providing few services in return.