Staff about to get union rights- CalMatters


In summary

Legislators appear ready to finally give their staff the right to unionize. But a final change would allow new lawmakers to dismiss their predecessor’s staffers.

The effort to allow California’s legislative staff to unionize — at least 23 years in the works — is nearly across the finish line.

But to win enough support from their bosses, significant changes are still being made: New lawmakers would be able to dismiss their predecessor’s staffers. In July, the bill was amended to push back when the union could organize from 2024 to 2026. 

The watered-down version passed the Senate today on a 30-3 vote, and awaits a final vote in the Assembly before it goes to the governor. 

This is at least the fifth time a bill to allow staff to unionize has been introduced. The first such attempt was in 2000. Critics have pointed to the absence of collective bargaining for their own employees as one way legislators don’t follow the laws they pass for everyone else. 

Past efforts have failed because of concerns that a union could get in the way of elected officials representing their constituents, as well as undermining the autonomy of how lawmakers run their offices.   

What changed this year? 

In addition to dozens of amendments over the past few years, the bill’s author, Assemblymemer Tina McKinnor, is a former legislative staff member herself and is the new leader of the Public Employment and Retirement Committee where the bill has repeatedly failed. The Assembly’s leaders made it Assembly Bill 1, and it has more than 40 co-authors from both chambers — including both the former and current Assembly speakers.

McKinnor is among 21 Assemblymembers and five senators who previously worked as Legislative staff members.

Learn more about legislators mentioned in this story

Tina McKinnor

State Assembly, District 61 (Inglewood)

Tina McKinnor

State Assembly, District 61 (Inglewood)

How she voted 2021-2022

Liberal Conservative

District 61 Demographics

Voter Registration

Dem 63%

GOP 9%

No party 21%

Campaign Contributions

Asm. Tina McKinnor has taken at least $441,000 from the Labor sector since she was elected to the legislature. That represents 35% of her total campaign contributions.

The Legislature this year has made several efforts to boost workers in other industries, including proposed deals this week to increase pay for workers in the fast food and health care industries. 

Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher — a former Assemblymember who carried legislative unionization bills in 2018, 2019 and 2021, and who is now head of the California Labor Federation — said this bill is one of the most important for the group this year.

If the bill is signed into law, about 1,800 full-time staffers employed by the Legislature would join statehouse workers from Oregon, the first state to allow unionizing. And congressional staffers won the right to unionize last year which helped convince some lawmakers.

The bill allows collective bargaining, but it would be up to staff to organize and win approval for a union. 

And while some concerns remain about the “constitutionality and functionality of the bill,” according to the Senate floor analysis — such as a lack of language addressing strikes, mediation, or arbitration — Gonzalez Fletcher said those details need to be addressed through contract negotiations, and would be inappropriate to include in legislation. 

The analysis also notes: “While other issues remain, it is also true that very few legislative projects pass in perfect form. The need for ongoing clarification and improvement would not be unique to this bill.” 




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