by Derrick A. Max

Virginia Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, the sponsor of a sweeping public-sector collective bargaining bill (Senate Bill 378) said Governor Spanberger told him Wednesday that she planned to veto the legislation.โฏ If she does, she will be making the right decision for Virginia taxpayers, local governments, students, public employees and for her status as the leader of her party here in the Commonwealth.
According to her amendment justification, Governor Spanberger supports collective bargaining generally, but not the way this bill would implement it. That distinction matters!
The original bill was not a modest reform. It would repeal Virginiaโs existing limits on public-sector collective bargaining, create a new Public Employee Relations Board, require public employers to negotiate over wages, hours, and other terms of employment, and establish collective bargaining for individual home care providers through a new state structure. It also would repeal Virginiaโs statutory protection declaring secret-ballot votes in union representation proceedings a fundamental right.
The Jefferson Forum warned repeatedly that this legislation would move Virginia in the wrong direction. It would weaken local control, increase costs, empower union bosses, inject more politics into public institutions, and impose rigid labor rules at the very moment Virginia needs flexibility and affordability.
Governor Spanbergerโs proposed amendments recognized many of our concerns. She sought to delay implementation for local governments until 2030, alter the new labor board structure, and preserve more authority for public employers. The General Assembly rejected those changes and sent the bill back to her in its original form. A clear disregard for the Governorโs concerns and authority.
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