Canada and Card Check
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
July 8, 2009
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Alexa Marrero
((202) 225-4527)
It appears that America’s northern neighbors may be rooting for enactment of the Employee Free Choice Act – but not for the reason you might think.
Canadians have plenty of experience with the public sign-up card check process for forming unions, and that experience has been anything but positive. In fact, card check and the arbitration that accompanies it have wreaked havoc on their economy, leaving many business leaders feeling that the nation is less competitive thanks to these misguided policies. As The Globe and Mail reported today, a group of Canadian business leaders gathered in Washington to warn American politicians not to follow their country’s example and pass the act – although, at least one found a silver lining in the potential for an American card check system:
McKenna, “Anti-union Lobby Fears ‘Armageddon on Capitol Hill,’” The Globe and Mail (Toronto), 07.08.09 Saxe suggested an interesting point. In addition to EFCA’s other dismal effects, there is the possibility of reduced U.S. performance in the global economy. Those other effects, for those who may have forgotten, are:
Take it from the Canadians. There is nothing “free” about this “free choice” act. # # # |