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Bill

Bill

SB 120

Relating to tax expenditures.

2025 Regular Session

SB 120 repeals Article 12 to empower public-sector unions to organize and bargain, while upholding bans on forced union membership and dues as a condition of employment.

In committee upon adjournment.
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 120

SB 120 — Remove Barriers to Labor Organizing

Status: Passed 1st Reading
Introduced: January 23, 2025
Subject areas: Commerce; Employment; Organized labor; Public; Government employees

Purpose and intent

SB 120 revises state labor policy to (1) affirm and expand the ability of labor organizations to enter into labor agreements and (2) remove statutory restrictions on labor organizing by public employees. The bill declares a public policy protecting the right to work and explicitly recognizes that labor organizations’ rights to enter into labor agreements “shall not be denied or abridged.”

Key provisions

  • Amends Article 10 of Chapter 95 (Declaration of Policy as to Labor Organizations):
    • Adds an express statement that it is the State’s public policy that labor organizations have an unabbreviated right to enter into labor agreements.
    • Reaffirms prohibitions on agreements that make union membership a condition of employment or create employment monopolies (i.e., continues to bar closed‑shop agreements).
    • Reiterates prohibitions on employers requiring employees to (a) join or remain members of a labor organization, (b) abstain from membership, or (c) pay union dues or fees as a condition of employment; and provides a private right of action for persons denied employment on those bases.
    • Includes a restriction (subsection) that invalidates contractual terms conditioning certain agricultural transactions on a producer’s union status, and disallows agreements requiring an agricultural producer to transfer funds to a union for employee dues.
  • Repeals Article 12 of Chapter 95 (text of Article 12 not reproduced in the bill), removing prior statutory restrictions on organizing by public employees. (The repeal is explicit: “Article 12 of Chapter 95 … is repealed.”)
  • Effective date / application: the act takes effect upon enactment and applies to agreements entered into on or after that date.

Who would be affected

  • Public employees and public employers (state and local): repeal of Article 12 removes a statutory barrier to public‑sector organizing; public employers may face new obligations or bargaining demands.
  • Labor organizations/unions: gains an explicit statement of legislative support for entering into labor agreements and the removal of a statutory restriction on organizing public employees.
  • Private employers and agricultural producers: maintain protections against closed‑shop arrangements; certain provisions bar conditioning purchases or contracts on union status and bar forced transfers to unions in agricultural contexts.
  • Courts and administrative agencies: may see new litigation or petitions to enforce rights or interpret the scope of the repeal and the amended Article 10.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • Introduced Jan 23, 2025; passed its first reading.
  • The bill states it becomes effective when enacted and governs agreements entered into on or after that date.
  • Implementation details (for example, how public‑sector bargaining mechanisms change, or any administrative rulemaking) would depend on subsequent regulations, agency action, and potential follow‑on legislation.

Practical implications and considerations

  • SB 120 removes a statutory restriction on public‑employee organizing (by repealing Article 12) while preserving existing prohibitions against conditioning employment on union membership or dues (i.e., it does not create closed‑shop authority).
  • The bill may expand the practical ability of unions to negotiate labor agreements involving public employees; it could prompt new organizing drives, bargaining requests, and possible budgetary or operational impacts for public employers.
  • The repeal and statutory changes may produce legal disputes about scope and implementation (e.g., collective‑bargaining coverage, permissible subjects of bargaining, preemption with other laws).
  • Because the bill keeps fee/membership prohibitions and includes an enforcement remedy, it both strengthens labor organizations’ formal right to contract while maintaining individual employee choice regarding union membership.

If you want, I can:
- Pull and summarize the prior Article 12 text to show exactly what restrictions are being repealed;
- Draft a short explainer aimed at public‑sector HR officials about immediate actions they may need to take if the bill becomes law; or
- Identify likely downstream issues (budgetary, bargaining, litigation) and stakeholders to watch.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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