Quantcast

National Right to Work Foundation opposes DOL proposal easing union financial disclosure rules

National Right to Work Foundation opposes DOL proposal easing union financial disclosure rules
Webp 049mufsipw2uvrj2bt3je9d93anm
William L. Messenger Vice President and Legal Director (2023-Present) | NRTWLD&EF, Inc

The National Right to Work Foundation has submitted formal comments opposing a proposed rule from the Office of Labor Management Standards (OLMS) that would change union financial disclosure requirements. The proposed regulation would raise the threshold for unions required to file detailed LM-2 reports with the Department of Labor from $250,000 in annual receipts to $450,000. Unions below this new threshold would only need to submit less comprehensive LM-3 or LM-4 forms.

According to the Foundation, this adjustment would mean that many unions currently providing detailed disclosures would instead submit shorter reports, reducing transparency for millions of workers. The Foundation’s comments state: “The ‘cost’ of the proposed rule—the information that workers and others will no longer be able to learn about unions—is considerable. The rule’s ostensible ‘benefit’—reducing union reporting burdens—is not supported by evidence and is insignificant…The costs of the proposed rule greatly outweigh its nonexistent benefits.”

The Foundation highlighted that over 7,700 unions with receipts under $450,000 are located in states without Right to Work laws. These unions reported combined annual receipts exceeding $523 million and more than 4 million members. The Foundation argues that without detailed reporting requirements, these workers would lose access to important information about how their dues are spent.

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

The comments further explain: “The lack of more detailed reporting requirements for these unions therefore harms over 4 million workers by denying them meaningful details” regarding how union officials spend their hard-earned money.

The Foundation also noted that current LM-2 forms allow workers to see spending on overhead, administration, and political contributions. They argue that moving more unions to LM-3 filings would obscure this information: “[t]he proposed rule will deprive workers of this information about many unions because the LM-3 does not include these reporting categories.”

Additionally, the Foundation claims reduced transparency could hinder enforcement of rights established by the Supreme Court’s Communications Workers of America v. Beck decision, which prevents union officials from requiring nonmembers to pay for ideological activities unrelated to workplace representation.

Addressing OLMS’ justification for the rule change—that it reduces regulatory burden—the Foundation’s comments state: “An estimate that OLMS put out about the number of hours that the proposed requirements would save unions is ‘out of date, fails to account for modern…software, and is not even an estimate of the time it takes impacted unions to complete LM-2 reports, but rather is an estimate of the average time it takes all unions to complete LM-2 reports.’”

The Foundation called on OLMS to require all unions to file full LM-2 reports regardless of size. “The benefit of this change is self-evident: workers, the public, and the Department will receive more information about union finances, which in turn will lead to more informed workers and deter and uncover more union corruption,” according to their submission.

National Right to Work Foundation President Mark Mix commented: “America’s top union bosses are routinely caught abusing the funds they demand from millions of workers across the country, all while promoting divisive and often radical political causes at every level of government. Acting in the best interests of workers means providing more clarity on how employee money is spent, not less.”

Mix added: “Make no mistake: The OLMS’ proposed rule will benefit union bosses at the expense of rank-and-file workers. Every worker deserves to know the basic details of how their money is being spent by those who claim to ‘represent them,’ and the slated rule would deprive millions of workers of what little information they already have.”

More News

Alaska Airlines has announced a significant expansion of its route network for 2026, with plans to introduce service to two new cities and launch 13 new or returning routes.

Oct 25, 2025

Delta Air Lines will introduce new in-flight menu options created by celebrity chef José Andrés starting November 4.

Oct 25, 2025

The Blue Sky partnership between United Airlines and JetBlue launched today, allowing members of both airlines’ loyalty programs to earn and redeem points across the two carriers.

Oct 25, 2025

Air Canada is set to expand its presence at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport (YTZ) by introducing four new nonstop routes to the United States in 2026.

Oct 25, 2025

United Airlines has announced it will add 10 new destinations from its Chicago O'Hare International Airport hub starting next year.

Oct 25, 2025

The partnership between United Airlines and JetBlue, known as Blue Sky, has officially launched.

Oct 25, 2025