Bucks County Paycheck Protection Advocate Dislikes Legislation Name


Former board member Simon Campbell Credit: StopTeacherStrikes.org
Former board member Simon Campbell
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.

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That would be Maryโ€™s Law, which Campbell calls โ€œridiculous.โ€

The legislation would force public-sector unions to collect their own political money instead of the state deducting it from employeesโ€™ paychecks. Itโ€™s named after Mary Trometter, a college professor who filed a complaint with the stateโ€™s 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 โ€œlegally irrelevantโ€ to Trometterโ€™s situation, Campbell said. The unions, after all, could have sent the letter to her husband, even with paycheck protection in place.

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โ€œConservatives shoot themselves in the foot when they fabricate by insinuation what the legislation is designed to do,โ€ Campbell said. โ€œThe 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 Maryโ€™s Law.

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Recent history shows that.

Lawmakers passed Kevinโ€™s 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 thereโ€™s Davidโ€™s Law, also passed this year. It givesย โ€œGood Samaritansโ€ who help overdose victims immunity from criminal prosecution and also makes an anti-overdose drug more available in Pennsylvania. Itโ€™s named after David Massi II, who died of a drug overdose in 2013.

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Then thereโ€™s the well-known Meganโ€™s 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 doesnโ€™t rise to such a level. Campbell said he has a point.

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โ€œIt sets the legislator up for sharp criticism around the idea of de-valuing a rape victim,โ€ Campbell said.

Campbell thinksย paycheck protection isnโ€™t 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 Trometterโ€™s case more as a right-to-work issue, which focuses on forced union dues rather than collection.

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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 โ€œPolitical Ethics Actโ€ or โ€œTaxpayer Protection Actโ€ as more suitable names.

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โ€œโ€˜Maryโ€™s Lawโ€™ as a name is a gimmick, and a crappy one at that,โ€ Campbell said. โ€œIf government was run as a business, the chief marketing officer would be getting fired right about now.โ€