U.S. states with right-to-work laws
As of May 2024, the following 26 states have right-to-work laws: The territory of
Guam also has right-to-work laws.
Ohio allows employees to opt out from joining a union, but unions are allowed to charge a typically smaller fee for employees that opted out.
Local or repealed laws Some states had right-to-work laws in the past, but repealed them or had them declared invalid. There are also some counties and municipalities located in states without right-to-work laws that have passed local laws to ban union security agreements.
Delaware Seaford passed a right-to-work ordinance in 2018, despite the State Solicitor disputing the authority of local governments to do so under Delaware law. Later that year, the
Delaware General Assembly blocked the municipal ordinance.
Illinois Lincolnshire passed a local right-to-work ordinance, but it was struck down by the
U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. An appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court resulted in the case being
vacated as being
moot because in the intervening period Illinois had passed the Illinois Collective Bargaining Freedom Act to invalidate such local ordinances. In a 2022
referendum, voters in Illinois approved a state constitutional amendment establishing a right to
collective bargaining. The amendment also prevents any future state legislature or local government from passing a right-to-work law.
Indiana Before its passage in 2012, the Republican-controlled
Indiana General Assembly passed a right-to-work bill in 1957, which led to the Democratic takeover of Indiana's Governor's Mansion and General Assembly in the coming elections, and eventually, the new Democratic-controlled legislature repealing the right-to-work law in 1965. Right-to-work was subsequently reenacted in 2012.
Michigan Michigan adopted a right-to-work bill in 2012. After Democrats gained a
trifecta in 2023, the legislature passed a bill repealing the right-to-work law, which was subsequently signed into law by Governor
Gretchen Whitmer and took effect in 2024.
Missouri The
legislature passed a right-to-work bill in 2017, but the law was defeated in a 2018
referendum before it could take effect.
New Hampshire New Hampshire adopted a right-to-work bill in 1947, but it was repealed in 1949 by the
state legislature and
governor. In 2017, a proposed right to work bill was defeated in the
New Hampshire House of Representatives 200–177. In 2021, the same bill was reintroduced but again defeated in the House of Representatives 199–175.
New Mexico New Mexico law previously did not explicitly prohibit nor allow mandatory union membership as a condition of employment at the statewide level, thereby leaving it up to local jurisdictions to establish their own right-to-work policies. Several counties, notably
Chaves,
Eddy,
Lea,
Lincoln,
McKinley,
Otero,
Roosevelt,
Sandoval,
San Juan, and
Sierra counties, in addition to
Ruidoso village adopted such laws. In 2019, the
New Mexico Legislature approved legislation that prohibits local right-to-work laws and further states that union membership and the payment of union dues may be required as a condition of employment in workplaces subject to a collective bargaining agreement; it was signed by governor
Michelle Lujan Grisham. In 2020, New Mexico's legislature passed House Bill 364 that authorizes and promotes the use of
card check protocols for workers considering organizing into a labor union. New Mexico does not currently require
Project Labor Agreements for state-sponsored projects, but some local jurisdictions (notably
Bernalillo County and the
City of Albuquerque) have ordinances in place requiring Project Labor Agreements for locally-sponsored projects that exceed specified dollar-value thresholds. ==See also==