HR 4774 · 96th Congress · Labor and Employment

A bill to amend the National Labor Relations Act to provide that any employee who is a member of a religion or sect historically holding conscientious objection to joining or financially supporting a labor organization shall not be required to do so.

Introduced 1979-07-12· Sponsored by Rep. Thompson, Frank, Jr. [D-NJ-4]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
House Vote
Senate
Enacted
Latest: Public Law 96-593.(1980-12-24)

Recorded Votes

PassedHouse · 1980-02-12
Yea 349Nay 15
PassedHouse · 1980-02-12
Yea 349Nay 15

Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Amends the National Labor Relations Act to provide that any employee who is a member of and adheres to a bona fide religion, body, or sect historically holding conscientious objection to joining or financially supporting a labor organization shall not be required to do so. Allows such employee to be required in an employment contract to pay sums in lieu of and equal to dues and initiation fees to a nonreligious, nonlabor, charitable organization chosen by the employee. Authorizes the labor organization to charge such employee the reasonable cost of any grievance-arbitration procedure instigated by and for such employee's benefit.…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

Cosponsors (10)

2 Democrats8 Republicans