The PRO Act would also prohibit employers from permanently replacing employees who strike, give stronger protections to contract workers, and provide compensatory damages for employees while penalizing employers that illegally fire or retaliate against workers. Among other protections, the Act would also ban captive audience meetings.
House Education and Labor Committee Chairman Bobby Scott (D-VA) introduced the legislation, which now has 141 co-sponsors, including Congressional Progressive Caucus Co-Chairs Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) and Rep. Mark Pocan (D-WI).
Advocates of the bill can point to hard data showing that when working people can organize and bargain for a fair paycheck, they do better, their families do better, and their communities do better. From the late 1940s through the late 1970s, when about a third of the workforce was unionized, productivity rose steadily, and working people experienced significant wage growth.
Over the past 40 years, as union density has declined, wage growth has stalled, despite rising productivity. Wealth has become increasingly concentrated in the top 1 percent of U.S. households.
But for workers in unions, the union advantage remains as strong as ever. The typical private sector union worker earns $989 a week compared to $848 for his or her non-union counterparts. Women in unions typically earn 25 percent more than those who are not union members. Black union workers, on average, earn 21 percent more than non-union black workers. Latinx union workers earn 37 percent more than their non-union counterparts.
Union members also typically have far greater access to workplace benefits than non-union workers. Ninety-four percent of union members have access to job-related medical benefits compared to 66 percent of other workers. Ninety-two percent have job-related retirement plans. Eighty-nine percent have paid vacations and 83 percent have paid sick days.
The PRO Act would provide long overdue strengthened protections for people organizing to form a union and for people who are already members of a union. Increasing unionization rates would build bargaining power for workers, allowing more people to negotiate for the wages, benefits, and workplaces they deserve.
Alan Barber is the Policy Director and Liz Watson is the Executive Director of the Congressional Progressive Caucus Center, a nonprofit that works to bring the power of grassroots organizing and progressive thinking to bear in Congress. This commentary is drawn from the report “The Moment for Labor Law Reform.”
We need everyone to call their elected officials in Washington and demand they support this bill, and then call all of their friends to get them to call Washington as well.