Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Latest Breaking News
In reply to the discussion: Court Strikes Down Scott Walker's Right-To-Work Law As Unconstitutional [View all]Omaha Steve
(110,054 posts)18. Right to work for less facts

http://www.aflcio.org/Legislation-and-Politics/State-Legislative-Battles/Ongoing-State-Legislative-Attacks/Right-to-Work
States with Right to Work Laws Have:
1
Lower Wages and Incomes
The average worker in states with right to work laws makes $5,971 (12.2 percent) less annually than workers in states without right to when all other factors are removed than workers in other states.
2
Median household income in states with these laws is $6,568 (11.8 percent) less than in other states ($49,220 vs. $55,788).
3
In states with right to work laws, 25.9 percent of jobs are in low-wage occupations, compared with 18.0 percent of jobs in other states.
4
Lower Rates of Health Insurance Coverage
People under the age of 65 in states with right to work laws are more likely to be uninsured (16.3 percent, compared with 12.4 percent in free-bargaining states).
5
Theyre less likely to have job-based health insurance than people in other states (53.9 percent, compared with 57.1 percent)
6 and pay a larger share of their health insurance premiums (29.9 percent compared with 26.1 percent).
7
Only 46.8 percent of private-sector employers in states with these laws offer insurance coverage to their employees, compared with 52.6 percent in other states. That difference is even more pronounced among small employers (with fewer than 50 workers)only 30.3 percent offer workers health insurance, compared with 38.8 percent of small employers in other states.
8
Higher Poverty and Infant Mortality Rates
Poverty rates are higher in states with right to work laws (14.8 percent overall and 20.2 percent for children), compared with poverty rates of 13.1 percent overall and 18.3 percent for children in states without these laws.
9
The infant mortality rate is 14.2 percent higher in states with these laws.
10
Less Investment in Education
States with right to work laws spend 31.3 percent less per pupil on elementary and secondary education than other states.
11
Higher Workplace Fatalities
The rate of workplace deaths is 54.4 percent higher in states with these laws, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
12
1 With the exception of the infant mortality rate and low-wage jobs data, the state data included here do not include data from Indiana and Michigan. These states are not included in the 2012 and 2013 data because they passed right to work laws in 2012; the impact of right to work policies on their economies would not have been fully experienced in 2012 and 2013. They have been excluded from the free-bargaining states versus right to work state analysis for the 2012 and 2013 data.
2 Bureau of Labor Statistics, Quarterly Census of Employment & Wages, Average Annual Pay for 2013, accessed 12/9/14.
3 U.S. Census Bureau, Table H-8. Median Household Income by State: 1984 to 2013.
4 CFED, Asset and Opportunity Scorecard, Low Wage Jobs, 2011.
5 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Health Insurance Coverage of Nonelderly 0-64, 2012.
6 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Percent of Private Sector Establishments That Offer Health Insurance to Employees, 2012.
7 CFED, Asset and Opportunity Scorecard, Employee Share of Premium, 2012.
8 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Percent of Private Sector Establishments That Offer Health Insurance to Employees, by Firm Size, 2012.
9 U.S. Census Bureau, POV46: Poverty Status by State: 2013 Below 100% and 50% of Poverty -- People Under 18 Years of Age, WEIGHTED PERSON COUNT.
10 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Infant Mortality Rate (Deaths per 1,000 Live Births), 2007-2009.
11 National Education Association, Rankings & EstimatesRankings of the States 2013 and Estimates of School Statistics 2014, H-11. Current Expenditures for Public K-12 Schools per Student in Fall Enrollment, 2012-2013, March 2014.
12 AFL-CIO, Death on the Job: The Toll of Neglect, April 2014.
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
62 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
Court Strikes Down Scott Walker's Right-To-Work Law As Unconstitutional [View all]
silvershadow
Apr 2016
OP
Wont this now go to the SC in that state where a seat was stolen in election fraud?
Jackie Wilson Said
Apr 2016
#1
"A" seat??? How about the majority of the seats. It would be very difficult to overstate ...
Scuba
Apr 2016
#37
Absolutely! I still say some state legislator should draft legislation ...
1StrongBlackMan
Apr 2016
#30
It has to make a stop on the way, which it surely will. All I was saying is that when it does
silvershadow
Apr 2016
#11
Nor do I, though I wasn't expecting it to get to SCOTUS before the 9th Justice is
silvershadow
Apr 2016
#16
I am pretty sure we won't have to wait that long for the affirmation. There MUST be
silvershadow
Apr 2016
#19
Yep....................the state now has a confirmed Kochite on the court...........................
turbinetree
Apr 2016
#12
So are Gableman, and the "strangling judge" Prosser...et al still it is a victory _K&R
bobthedrummer
Apr 2016
#39
Our right to organize and form a union was infringed upon 30 years ago in Idaho.
Major Hogwash
Apr 2016
#32
Exactly. If I and my colleagues bust our nuts to get union representing (which often takes years),
silvershadow
Apr 2016
#27
AS a UNION member..................................as all union members and supporters...........
turbinetree
Apr 2016
#31
Yep. I forgot to mention that I call them "squatters". I have known a few Republicans in my day
silvershadow
Apr 2016
#33
It's VERY unlikely such a challenge will ever come before the U.S. Supreme Court.
branford
Apr 2016
#47
Ok, how about a little Fairness Doctrine then? And some optimism? Without that despair flourishes.
Dont call me Shirley
Apr 2016
#53
I agree whole heartedly we must win over the hearts and minds of voters to elect pro-union,
Dont call me Shirley
Apr 2016
#55
Not all media are our adversary, but the billionaire owned Main Stream Media, which is a large
Dont call me Shirley
Apr 2016
#57
On the job, if you want to keep your job, you do what the boss says. I got fired because I wouldn't
Dont call me Shirley
Apr 2016
#59
A demand for sex as part of employment is unlawful in every state and city in the country,
branford
Apr 2016
#60
But what I'm saying is that employers do illegal stuff all the time and get away with it. Including
Dont call me Shirley
Apr 2016
#61