
Credit: StopTeacherStrikes.org
By Andrew Staub | PA Independent
Simon Campbell, president of Pennsylvanians for Union Reform and a former Pennsbury School Board member, likes the concept behind paycheck protection legislation. He just has a problem with what Republican lawmakers have named it.
That would be Maryโs Law, which Campbell calls โridiculous.โ
The legislation would force public-sector unions to collect their own political money instead of the state deducting it from employeesโ paychecks. Itโs named after Mary Trometter, a college professor who filed a complaint with the stateโs labor relations board after her husband received a political letter from the National Education Association and the Pennsylvania State Education Association.
But paycheck protection legislation is โlegally irrelevantโ to Trometterโs situation, Campbell said. The unions, after all, could have sent the letter to her husband, even with paycheck protection in place.
โConservatives shoot themselves in the foot when they fabricate by insinuation what the legislation is designed to do,โ Campbell said. โThe legislation has enough merit to proceed on its own without silly marketing gimmicks.โ
The name game could backfire, too, Campbell said. Legislation named after individuals has typically been reserved for tragic situations, a point Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Allegheny, made when talking about Maryโs Law.
Recent history shows that.
Lawmakers passed Kevinโs Law earlier this year, closingย a loophole in state law that allowed drunk drivers to avoid DUI charges by fleeing the scene of a crash. It was named for 5-year-old Kevin Miller, killed by a hit-and-run driver in Wilkes-Barre just before Christmas in 2012.
Then thereโs Davidโs Law, also passed this year. It givesย โGood Samaritansโ who help overdose victims immunity from criminal prosecution and also makes an anti-overdose drug more available in Pennsylvania. Itโs named after David Massi II, who died of a drug overdose in 2013.
Then thereโs the well-known Meganโs Law, which makes information about registered sex offenders available to the public and is named for a 7-year-old girl who was raped and killed in 1994.
Costa said paycheck protection doesnโt rise to such a level. Campbell said he has a point.
โIt sets the legislator up for sharp criticism around the idea of de-valuing a rape victim,โ Campbell said.
Campbell thinksย paycheck protection isnโt even a great name, saying people care more about protecting than own paychecks than those of public employees, especially in a down economy.ย He sees Trometterโs case more as a right-to-work issue, which focuses on forced union dues rather than collection.
A dues collection law, he said, should be castย as a way to stop government corruption and would be better off focusing on an image of somebody such as former state Sen. Bob Mellow, a disgraced lawmaker who used public resources for campaign purposes.
Campbell suggests the โPolitical Ethics Actโ or โTaxpayer Protection Actโ as more suitable names.
โโMaryโs Lawโ as a name is a gimmick, and a crappy one at that,โ Campbell said. โIf government was run as a business, the chief marketing officer would be getting fired right about now.โ
















