State House labor pains: The long fight carries on for unionizing legislative aides

 


The Download Email Header

ON THE DOCKET: The state’s highest court will hear oral arguments next month on four noteworthy cases dealing with charter schools, whistleblower protections, pay for attorneys who represent indigent defendants, and a tobacco-related verdict. Jennifer Smith has the details. 

OPINION: Katherine Gergen Barnett, a family medicine physician at Boston Medical Center who has cared for hundreds of families facing homelessness, argues that the Healey administration is offering mixed messaging on housing for those in need by simultaneously promoting new development that would prioritize low-income residents and limiting emergency shelter access. 

State House and Senate staff who have spent more than three years publicly waging a fruitless battle for collective bargaining rights achieved something of a moral victory this summer, when they convinced Massachusetts Democratic Party delegates to put new support for their campaign in writing.  

Thanks to an amendment adopted at the Democrats’ state convention, the official party platform explicitly supports providing legislative aides with “the compensation, support, and collective bargaining rights they deserve.” It marked the latest sign of unionization backing from a party that regularly pitches itself as pro-labor, following endorsements from most of the state’s all Democratic congressional delegation and then-gubernatorial candidate Maura Healey.  

There’s just one hitch: the seemingly widespread support for legislative staff unionization makes little difference if, as continues to be the case, the two Democrats who control the Legislature aren’t on board.   

Years after staff went public with their demands, the two people who call the shots in the Legislature show no interest in allowing them to organize. Meanwhile, supporters who have sway on Beacon Hill are not expending much political capital — if any — on the effort.  

That leaves State House aides in a mostly powerless position, with the most obvious routes forward both blocked by legislative leaders.   

Senate President Karen Spilka has declined to recognize the staff union, saying the chamber’s attorney concluded that legislative staff under statute do not receive the same collective bargaining rights afforded to most other public employees. In the House, where organizing aides have not yet achieved a majority of staff with signed union cards, Speaker Ron Mariano has not weighed in.  

Some lawmakers proposed legislation that would clear up the legal concern raised by the Senate president’s team and award those rights, but House and Senate bosses who decide which bills get votes have so far kept the measures on ice.  

To frustrated legislative staff members leading the union drive, the commitment of Democratic leaders to organized labor should begin at home.     

“This is a test of the Legislature’s commitment to collective bargaining rights and our pro-union rhetoric,” said Ravi Simon, a House employee and one of the organizers of the unionization effort. “I would hope that legislators that consider themselves pro-union would approach this issue with real thoughtfulness and from a perspective of trying to figure out how to make collective bargaining and unionization work in the State House.”

CLIMATE CHAT: In a conversation with CommonWealth Beacon, Massachusetts energy and environmental affairs secretary Rebecca Tepper discusses her previously unreported trip up to Nova Scotia last month to explore how Massachusetts can tap into Canadian offshore wind. She tells Jordan Wolman that the state should push forward on its clean energy transition while cutting costs.

SAFETY BILL: A new bill put forward in the House would give transit workers expanded legal protections against assault and battery. Colin Young of the State House News Service reports the bill was filed in response to what Speaker Ron Mariano described as “growing concerns from transit agencies and labor advocates about the rising number of attacks on workers.”

VACCINES: With vaccine skepticism rising locally and in the federal government, pediatricians are trying to increase dialogue with patients. (WBUR)

PARKS: National Park Service employees are furloughed during the ongoing federal government shutdown, and effects are spilling over into popular tourist sites, like a sign outside the USS Constitution that reads, “SHIP IS CLOSED.” (GBH News)

FOOD AID: The Healey administration and the United Way launched a relief fund seeking private donations to help the roughly 1 million Massachusetts residents expected to stop receiving SNAP benefits starting Nov. 1 due to the shutdown. (State House News Service – paywall)
FROM WBUR TODAY:

SNAP decision: More than a million Massachusetts residents could lose their food benefits this weekend, as the federal government shutdown continues. As WBUR's Chris Van Buskirk and Rachell Sanchez-Smith report, local Democrats are pushing the Trump administration to release billions of dollars to continue funding the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, aka SNAP or food stamps.

  • According to Gov. Maura Healey, no president has let SNAP benefits lapse, even amid a shutdown. The Trump administration has said they won't have money to fund SNAP benefits starting Nov. 1. But Democrats see it as a play for "political leverage" or retaliation. "While the most vulnerable of Americans can't and won't be able to put food on their kitchen table, Donald Trump is building a $300 billion ballroom next to the White House," Sen. Ed Markey said Friday.
  • What's the backup plan? Healey said the state can't use its rainy day fund to backfill the food benefits. "It's about $240 million a month that comes in through SNAP benefits," she said. "No state can make up the difference." Meanwhile, Healey announced that a new program through the United Way will take donations to help support people who are losing food assistance.
  • Zoom in: In Massachusetts, 1.1 million residents receive SNAP benefits, including 300,000 children and a similar number of people with disabilities.
  • Zoom out: Across the country, 42 million SNAP recipients could see benefits disappear. Anti-hunger advocates say it would lead to "the most mass hunger suffering we've had in America since the Great Depression."



WORLD CUP: The Boston area's World Cup host committee is worried that state government isn’t providing enough funding for the megaevent, cautioning that they will “have to go back to the drawing board” if Beacon Hill doesn’t fulfill a $20 million request. (The Boston Globe – paywall)

MATTAPAN: The state sold a 10-acre parcel of land at the former Mattapan State Hospital to a developer planning to build 287 new housing units. (Dorchester Reporter)

 
 
 
CommonWealth Beacon Logo

Published by MassINC

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Today in Politics, Bulletin 144. 6/3/25

CONGRESSMAN JAKE AUCHINCLOSS

Ramble On: Waiting for the Barbarians (video)