@053 CHAP ZZ ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ THE "UNION SHOP" AND STATE RIGHT-TO-WORK LAWS ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ The National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA"), a federal law that has governed labor union/management disputes since the days of FDR and the New Deal, generally makes it il- legal for a company to require that a person be a member of a labor union before he or she can be hired as an em- ployee. Thus, the so-called "closed shop" has been il- legal under federal law for many years. However, a "union shop" contract between a company and a union is still permitted under the NLRA. A "union shop" is, in simple terms, a situation where a person can be hired by a company without first being a union member, but is required, under the collective bargaining agreement between the company and the union, to become a member of the union (usually within 30 days after becoming employed), in order to remain an employee. A similar arrangement that is also acceptable under the NLRA is an "agency shop" ag- reement, which provides that an employee need not join the union, but still must pay dues to the union in order to remain an employee. But the NLRA provides that a state, if it wishes to provide stricter limitations on mandatory union membership and mandatory union dues payments, may prohibit such "union shop" or "agency shop" agreements, as a matter of state law. To date, 21 states have enacted such "right-to-work" laws, which all guarantee, at a minimum, that no person may be denied employment for refusal to join a union. A number of such laws also prohibit mandatory payment of union dues by non-union workers in order to retain employment (banning the so-called "agency shop," as well as the "union shop"). Many employers consider states which have "right-to-work" laws to be advantageous places to locate businesses, since unions have a much tougher time organizing workers where they are prohibited from creating "union shop" situations. Thus, in recent years, many firms have relocated in states that have such right-to-work laws, which tend to be Sunbelt states in the South and the West or Midwest. It is no ac- cident that most of the fastest growing states in the U.S. in recent decades, such as Nevada, Florida, and Arizona, are all "right-to-work" states, and thus very attractive to industry. None of the larger, heavily industrialized and unionized states, such as New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, California, etc., has a right-to-work law. @CODE: AL AZ AR FL GA ID IA KS LA MS NB NV NC ND SC SD TN TX UT VA WY @STATE is one of the 21 states that has a Right-to- Work law at present. @CODE:EN @CODE: DC Washington, D.C. does not have a Right-to-Work law. @CODE:EN @CODE: NY MI PA OH CA @CODE:EN At present, @STATE does not have a Right-to-Work law.