The drop in active union membership is larger than that of any other state over the last five years
MacIver News Service | June 20, 2016
In just the last year, almost 5,100 members left the state’s largest teachers’ union – a 12.3 percent drop from 2014. Before the passage of Act 10, WEAC had almost 100,000 members. Today, the union stands at just 36,074 members.
The trend continues at the national level. Twenty-eight states reported union membership losses in 2015. More then 12,000 active members left the National Education Council last year, amounting to a 0.5 percentage drop. Since 2011, the organization’s active membership across the country has dropped by almost 10 percent.
Alabama and Michigan are the only two states that lost more active union members than Wisconsin in the last year. More than 10,000 members left the Alabama Education Association, a 16 percent drop in membership.
Gov. Scott Walker’s signature law, known as Act 10, allowed Wisconsin’s public employees the freedom to decide whether or not they want to join a union and pay dues. The Right to Work law, passed in early 2015, extended that freedom to all workers.
Public unions must now also hold annual recertification votes. In order to become recertified, a majority of union members must vote yes. As the MacIver News Service previously reported, 100 fewer unions chose to seek recertification in 2014.