July 2019 Living Liberty

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F R E E D O M F O U N D AT I O N TA K E S ON 5 S TAT E S [5] DIS A BIL I T Y DUE S S C HE ME H A LT E D [4] C A MPA IGN F IN A NC E C O M P L A I N T TA R G E T S W S C C C E [ 1 0 ]

LIVINGLIBERTY A PUBLICATION OF THE FREEDOM FOUNDATION | JULY 2019

SETTLING UP SEIU AGREES TO SETTLEMENT IN FORGERY SUIT, WRITES OUT HEFTY CHECKS By CARL HOROWITZ Reprinted from the NATIONAL LEGAL & POLICY CENTER

Electronic Service Requested

Freedom Foundation PO Box 552 Olympia, WA 98507

May 30, 2019 Service Employees International Union Local 775, it seems, would do anything for a buck, including collecting dues from a former member. It’s now learned its limitations. On March 29, the Seattle-based union reached an out-of-court agreement with a Spokane home caregiver, Cindy Ochoa, following its admission that one of its canvassers had forged her signature on a membership card. Ochoa, with the help of a nonprofit legal group, the Freedom Foundation, had filed a lawsuit in federal court in October alleging the union had violated her First Amendment rights, unlawfully withheld part of her wages, and caused emotional distress. Local 775 agreed to pay $15,000 in damages to her and $13,000 to the foundation to cover legal fees, plus send her a written apology. SEIU Local 775 represents more than 45,000 long-term health care providers in

Washington State and Montana, many of them operating out of their homes on behalf of family members. One of them was a Spokane woman named Cindy Ochoa who had grown dissatisfied with her representation. A June 2014 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Harris v. Quinn, gave her the means of exit. The court ruled in that Illinois case that nonunion private-sector home care workers could not be forced to pay “fair share” dues to a public-sector union simply because some or all of their wages are derived from a state-run Medicaid program. Not long after that ruling, Ochoa left the union. Yet the union continued to deduct dues from her paycheck. She wondered how that could be. The reason, it turned out, was that in 2016 a union representative had visited her home and pressured her to rejoin. Though Ochoa refused, the canvasser had signed her name on a membership card and turned it into the union. And the union, with seemingly willful blindness, assumed the signature was legitimate. Meanwhile, the dues deductions from Ms. Ochoa’s paychecks resumed. She attempted to persuade the union to end the deductions via phone and mail, but to no avail. Then she contacted the Freedom Foundation in early 2018. The Freedom Foundation, which has handled numerous worker liberty cases over the See FORGERY Page 10


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