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Branch v. Commonwealth Employment Relations Board

MASSApril 9, 2019No. SJC 12603Cited 17 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Gants, Lenk, Gaziano, Lowy, Budd, Cypher, Kafker
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court affirmed the Commonwealth Employment Relations Board's dismissal of the employees' constitutional challenges to the agency fee and exclusive representation provisions of the state's collective bargaining statute, finding the agency fee challenge moot and the exclusive representation challenge foreclosed by Supreme Court precedent.

What This Ruling Means

**Branch v. Commonwealth Employment Relations Board - Court Ruling Summary** **What Happened:** A group of state employees in Massachusetts challenged two key parts of the state's collective bargaining law. First, they objected to "agency fees" - mandatory payments that non-union workers had to make to cover the costs of union representation. Second, they challenged "exclusive representation," which means the union represents all workers in a bargaining unit, whether they want union representation or not. **What the Court Decided:** The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled against the employees on both issues. The court said the agency fee challenge was no longer relevant (moot) because those fees had already been eliminated by a previous U.S. Supreme Court decision. For the exclusive representation challenge, the court said existing Supreme Court precedent already settled this issue in favor of allowing unions to represent all workers in a unit. **Why This Matters for Workers:** This ruling confirms that in Massachusetts, unions will continue to represent all workers in a bargaining unit, even those who prefer not to have union representation. However, workers can no longer be forced to pay agency fees if they choose not to join the union. The decision maintains the current balance between individual worker choice and collective bargaining rights.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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