Attendees at ACA International's recent Executive Summit held in Washington, D.C., pegged the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA)—including a particularly onerous provision referred to as “card check”—as the top business threat currently before Congress.
Among other provisions, the EFCA would abolish the secret ballot as a practical matter in favor of an open-ended process by which union organizers could force unionization by gathering the signatures of more than 50 percent of workers. There's no question this process is ripe for intimidation and coercion, and if made law, it threatens to send tens of thousands of collection agency jobs overseas within a matter of weeks.
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As a result of the Executive Summit, representatives from Horsham, Pa.-based ACA member NCO were able to arrange a meeting with Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.). At that meeting, NCO executives described the credit and collection industry, its affect on the Pennsylvania economy and the job base the industry has created in Pennsylvania and the nation. NCO representatives explained how card check would shrink that job base. Specter appears to have listened to the message—certainly as one of many considerations—as he recently announced he would oppose passage of the EFCA in the 110th Congress.
Opposition by Specter, the only Republican to have supported the legislation during the last Congress, is critical, as Senate rules require 60 votes to move passage of the legislation. This leaves Senate leadership at least one vote shy, even if all majority Democrats support—a unanimity that is now also in doubt.
ACA extends its most sincere gratitude for the tremendous advocacy efforts of NCO representatives and will continue in its efforts to ensure that EFCA and the onerous card check provision are never made law.
© 2009 ACA International. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted with the express written permission of ACA International.
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Comments
Comment from Anonymous on April 7, 2009 at 11:15AM EST
Tens of thousands of collection jobs and millions of others.
Comment from Anonymous on April 7, 2009 at 11:25AM EST
Yay! Good news. What a bleeding of jobs this proposed legislation would create. Glad Specter is on the right side of this issue.
Comment from John McNamara on April 7, 2009 at 11:39AM EST
Congrats to the ACA for continuing to watch our back. The unintended consequences of this legislation would have been disastrous.
Comment from lee on April 7, 2009 at 12:24PM EST
This is only a temporary solution. Specter will not get past the republican primary and it is likely a democrat will win that senate seat. EFCA will come up again and next time possibly with a bigger majority for democrats.
Comment from Anonymous on April 7, 2009 at 12:44PM EST
It's good to see the biggest player in the collections industry jump on this. However, it's going to take a lot more than that. The unions run deep with auto, teachers, federal contractors, etc.
Comment from Anonymous on April 7, 2009 at 1:57PM EST
I thought specter was a democrat! His voting record sure suggests it.
Comment from PublicServiceMsg on April 7, 2009 at 10:19PM EST
Collection Agencies need to push the "Get out and Vote" campaign along with the dialer campaigns. United we stand, otherwise NCO is the only voice, they need voters that support the position. Unionizing would move more jobs out of the country, or worse, automated.