Holmquist,
King say bill to unionize child care centers
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is unnecessary and likely to
mean less money for kids
February 10, 2009
OLYMPIA…
Legislation purporting to help child care centers by allowing
collective bargaining is likely to have the opposite effect,
taking money from centers while raising costs for parents, say
Sen. Janéa Holmquist, R-Moses Lake and
Sen. Curtis King, R-Yakima. They serve on the Senate
Labor, Commerce and Consumer Protection Committee, which heard
Senate Bill 5572 today.
“If the goal is to increase public subsidies for child care
centers and fund a child care wage ladder, you don’t need this
bill to accomplish that,” said Holmquist, the committee’s
ranking Republican member. “If Democrat supermajorities in the
House and Senate all support this idea, what’s stopping them
from increasing subsidies and funding the child care wage
ladder?”
“This bill has an administrative cost to the taxpayers of nearly
1.5 million dollars per biennium,” Holmquist explained. “At a
moment when we have a serious deficit, projected at 6 billion
dollars and growing, we should not be wasting state resources on
a heavy-handed and bureaucratic bill aimed at granting special
favors to unions. I would much rather see these dollars go
directly towards increasing childcare workers’ salaries.”
“With a few exceptions this is the same bill we saw a year ago,
but the pitch for it has some new spin. Now I hear the terms
‘early learning’ and ‘teacher’ being used where it used to be
‘child care center’ and ‘worker,’” King said. “My concerns about
this bill haven’t changed. It still has employers cover the
workers’ union dues, still has directors and workers in the same
bargaining unit, and it still sounds a lot like a path toward
mandatory unionization.”
SB 5572 would affect owners and employees of licensed child care
centers that have at least four slots filled by children covered
by state child-care subsidies. It would consider those workers
to be public employees and the governor as the public employer.
“I said it last year, and it’s still true: when has collective
bargaining brought costs down?” King said. “I don’t see how this
is going to be anything but a step backwards for parents and
children over the long run.”
Employees can already unionize at individual child care centers,
but this legislation gives the names and addresses of every
child care center worker, manager or owner to any interested
union.
“Ultimately, this bill is all about expanding union membership,”
said Holmquist. “And that should never come at the expense of
taxpayers, workers’ rights and, most importantly, the needs of
low-income children.”
— 30—
Sen. Janéa Holmquist,
Ranking Republican on the Senate Labor, Commerce & Consumer
Protection Committee, represents the 13th Legislative District,
which includes Kittitas and Grant counties and part of Yakima
County. Sen. Curtis King
represents the 14th Legislative District, which includes parts
of Yakima, the communities of Union Gap, Selah, Naches, Tieton
and Cowiche and the entire Upper Valley.
For more information contact
Booker Stallworth at
(360) 786-7536 or
stallworth.booker@leg.wa.gov..
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