Select Committee on Blockchain and Emerging Technologies-1.
HB 256 repeals the ban on public-employee bargaining and applies Article 10's union rights to all state/local workers, enabling formal bargaining but raising costs and admin needs.
HB 256 repeals the ban on public-employee bargaining and applies Article 10's union rights to all state/local workers, enabling formal bargaining but raising costs and admin needs.
Status: Passed 1st Reading
Introduced: August 19, 2025
Subject areas: Employment; Organized labor; Public personnel; State and local government employees
HB 256 removes an existing statutory prohibition on public‑sector collective bargaining and makes the State’s existing collective‑bargaining framework (Article 10 of Chapter 95) applicable to public employees and all state and local government employers. In short, it opens the public workforce to the same statutory collective‑bargaining rights that currently apply to private‑sector employees under Article 10.
Note: HB 256 does not itself restate the substantive rules of collective bargaining — it incorporates the provisions of Article 10 by reference. The specific rights, procedures, and limitations (e.g., certification, bargainable subjects, unfair labor practices procedures, and any limitations on strikes) will be defined by Article 10 as it currently exists or is later amended.
HB 256 repeals the statutory ban on public‑sector collective bargaining and extends the State’s existing collective‑bargaining law (Article 10) to all public employees and public employers. The bill is a structural change that enables public employees to organize and bargain under the existing Article 10 framework; its fiscal and operational consequences will depend on how bargaining proceeds and what specific agreements are reached.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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