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Searched in category Civil Rights.

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  1. Paycheck Protection in Michigan
    Summary: The U. S. Supreme Court's 1988 landmark decision Communication Workers v. Beck established the rights of employees working under union contracts to pay only those union dues or fees necessary to cover the costs of a union's employee representation duties. However, the majority of Michigan's nearly one million union workers are unaware of their rights under the Beck decision for the simple reason that their unions neglect to inform them. This report shows how "paycheck protection" legislation would help safeguard worker Beck rights by requiring unions to obtain up-front, written approval from individual workers each year before they could spend the dues money on political or other non-workplace-related activities. The report recommends that Michigan policy makers adopt a paycheck protection proposal to help union workers enjoy their freedoms of speech and association as they refrain from involuntarily contributing money to union causes with which they disagree.
    Details: Match Rating: 50. Posted: Sep. 1, 1998. Type: Study.
     
  2. Reforming Property Forfeiture Laws to Protect Citizens’ Rights
    Summary: The Framers of the United States Constitution understood that freedom depends upon the vigorous protection of private property rights and that this protection was therefore the most sacred obligation of government. However, despite Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment guarantees, recent years have witnessed a massive expansion of a legal practice known as "asset forfeiture," which allows government to violate the very property rights it is charged with protecting. Hundreds of asset forfeiture laws-many of them intended to stop illegal drug trafficking-give state and federal law enforcement agents the power to seize property even without proof of the owners' guilt in a criminal trial because, in many cases, the government considers the property itself to be the criminal. This study recommends nine reforms that will help guarantee that Michigan citizens enjoy the benefits of private property rights, limited government, and individual liberty, and remain protected from unjustified and arbitrary seizure of their personal possessions.
    Details: Match Rating: 50. Posted: Jul. 1, 1998. Type: Study.
     
  3. Compulsory Union Dues in Michigan
    Summary: Nearly one million Michigan workers are forced to financially support a union in order to keep their jobs. Although federal law permits unions and employers to force workers to pay for union representation in the workplace, the law does not extend to forcing workers to pay unions for representation in the political arena. Over three-fourths of union workers are not aware that they do not have to fund their unions' political, social, and ideological agendas. This report documents the developing law surrounding compulsory union dues in Michigan, shows workers how to exercise their rights to a dues refund, presents positive union strategies for making workers aware of their rights, and calls for executive action by the governor. 28 pp.
    Details: Match Rating: 50. Posted: May 1, 1997. Type: Study.
     
  4. The Limits of Compulsory Professionalism: Does a Unified Bar Make Sense for Michigan?
    Summary: No profession other than the practice of law, in Michigan or any other state, requires membership in a professional organization to maintain a license. This practice, known as the unified bar, has been the subject of litigation in a number of states. Practicing attorney and Law Professor Bradley A. Smith and attorney Alan Falk note that nineteen states have voluntary bar associations, and compare their operation to the "unified" (involuntary) associations. They find that compulsory bar membership provides no greater benefits than those provided by voluntary bar associations. 26 pages.
    Details: Match Rating: 50. Posted: May 1, 1994. Type: Study.
     
  5. Discrimination at Private Clubs in Michigan: Freedom of Association After Public Act 70
    Summary: In recent years, a cherished American right, freedom of association, has come into conflict with laws designed to prevent discrimination by private organizations. Michigan's Public Act 70 of 1992 is one such law. Examining P.A. 70, as well as Michigan's famed Elliot-Larsen law, University of Detroit Law Professor Stephen J. Safranek finds that the act was unnecessary, misdirected, and economically harmful. Individual consumers of club services are the real losers. P.A. 70 is government intervention without regard to the right of private clubs to engage in freedom of association. 16 pages.
    Details: Match Rating: 50. Posted: Apr. 1, 1994. Type: Study.
     
  6. Punishing the Good Neighbor
    Summary: Lisa Snyder has watched (without compensation) a five-year old kindergartener for her widowed neighbor and a seven-year old boy for another neighbor for a short period of time as they wait for the school bus. The Michigan Department of Human Services (DHS) made national news by demanding that she become a licensed day care provider. But what has largely been overlooked is that if Ms. Snyder were to go through the licensing process, she would thereby become a member of a purported government employees’ union.
    Details: Match Rating: 10. Posted: Sep. 30, 2009. Type: General Article.
     
  7. The Only True Freedom Is Freedom for All
    Details: Match Rating: 10. Posted: Jul. 3, 2009. Type: General Article.
     
  8. Michael D. LaFaive's "2009 State of the State Address": A Video Summary
    Details: Match Rating: 10. Posted: Feb. 2, 2009. Type: General Article.
     
  9. “Who Funds You, Anyway?”
    Details: Match Rating: 10. Posted: Nov. 6, 2007. Type: General Article.
     
  10. Today’s Announcement of Decline in Michigan’s Union Membership “Dramatically Highlights” Need for Right-To-Work Laws
    Figures do not reveal the complete union membership picture; manufacturing declines announced Tuesday underscore problem
    Details: Match Rating: 10. Posted: Jan. 25, 2007. Type: News Release.
     
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Searched in category Civil Rights.

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