Union support for a Florida bill that
would allow employees to keep guns locked in their cars on company grounds may
mean troubling times for employers.At a Florida Senate committee hearing March 27, the Florida
AFL-CIO came out in support of the bill, which is sponsored by the National
Rifle Association.
The issue of firearms in workplace is likely to become a hot
issue nationwide in light of the recent shootings at Virginia Tech. Among the 33
dead were at least seven university employees.
For the union, “guns are not the issue,” AFL-CIO spokesman
Rich Templin says.
“This is about protecting workers’ rights. When you drive to
work, your car still belongs to you. Your privacy doesn’t end when you get to
work.”
SB 2356, which was introduced earlier this year, would let
employees keep “any legal personal property” locked in their cars, even on
company property. Employers or other entities could not prohibit them from
having such items in their vehicles.
Similar bills are pending in Texas and Georgia as the NRA tries to pass
legislation throughout the country, observers say.
And if the unions choose to support these measures in other
parts of the country, employers will have to address the issue, says Mark
Neuberger, a labor lawyer at Buchanan Ingersoll in Miami.
“Employers are already fighting this to protect the security
of their workplaces,” he says. “But now this could become a bargaining issue
with the union.”
So far there hasn’t been any indication that the AFL-CIO will
support bills in other states, but it’s not out of the question, says Al
McKenna, a partner in the Orlando office of employment law firm Ford
& Harrison.
“It’s a way to cozy up to potential new members,” he says.
However, he notes that the unions are busy right now with more pressing matters.
“It could create pressure if the AFL-CIO decides to invest resources into the
support of this law,” McKenna says, “but this isn’t like the Employee Free
Choice Act,” the bill that would authorize a union when a majority of employees
sign cards approving collective bargaining. The bill is a top priority of
organized labor.
In Florida at least, the AFL-CIO’s support of the
bill has caused employers some concern. The Florida Chamber of Commerce and
others have strongly opposed the bill, arguing that it violates their property
rights.
“Our principal concern is that this bill is somewhere between
an attack on the employer/employee contract and on property rights overall,”
says Mark Wilson, executive director of the Florida Chamber of
Commerce.
Many were shocked to learn of the AFL-CIO’s support for the
bill.
“As the first people in line to be shot in a workplace
incident, it seems pretty ludicrous that a union organization would support
arming workers,” says Brian Siebel, a senior attorney at the Brady Campaign
to Prevent Gun Violence.
But Templin emphasizes that for the AFL-CIO, this is an issue
of protecting workers’ rights.
“As soon as someone takes the gun out of their vehicle or
makes a threat, the law addresses that,” he says. “This is about protecting
workers’ rights to keep things in their cars.”
Templin notes that there have been incidents where members
have been fired for having union materials in their cars, and this law would
prevent such incidents.
To support the bill, the AFL-CIO in Florida is sending out
e-mails to its 500,000 members encouraging them to call their senators in
support of the bill, Templin says.
Wilson says he’s surprised that HR managers
haven’t gotten more involved in the discussions about the bill. While the
Society for Human Resource Management testified in front of the Senate Criminal
Justice Committee against the bill and has sent information to their members,
Wilson says that
“we were hoping there would be more calls from HR managers.”
On April 10, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 8-3 to
approve the bill, which is now pending vote on the chamber floor. The House is
also considering a similar bill.
—Jessica Marquez
Tools and Resources for Dealing with Workplace
Violence
In light of Monday’s shooting rampage at Virginia Tech,
Workforce Management has assembled the following list of resources related to
workplace violence. The shooting at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State
University killed 33
people, including at least seven university employees.
Useful Information on Workplace Violence and Strategies for
Prevention and Response.
Workplace Violence Prevention and Response
Policy
Points to Cover in a Workplace Violence Policy
10 Tips on Recognizing and Minimizing Violence
Develop a Workplace Violence Program for Every
Site
Preventing Violence: An Organizational
Self-Assessment
Emergency Planning and Crisis Management
What to Do in a Catastrophe
Crafting the Crisis Communication Message
Dear Workforce: We Have a Longtime Employee with a History of
Belligerence. Is It Too Late to Reverse His Behavior?