Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. Senate Bill 5 would have impacted the state's 400,000 public workers, restricting their ability to strike and collectively bargain. As it stood, the bill only permitted public employees to collectively bargain for wages, preventing them from collectively bargaining for health insurance and pensions.

  2. Senate Bill 5 was a law passed in 2011 that would have stripped public employees of their collective bargaining rights. We didn’t start this fight, but we fought back. Throughout February and March, 2011, tens of thousands of Ohioans rallied at the Statehouse against SB 5.

  3. BONY and OCWEN assert that the Barwicks did not provide the check State Farm mailed to them in 2006 to OCWEN, but rather, intentionally waited several years until they could not be liable for a deficiency judgment to ask this Court to require State Farm to provide the proceeds to Plaintiffs alone.

  4. 8 lis 2011 · COLUMBUS - Republican Gov. John Kasich warned Democrats that they needed to support a hard-edged anti-union law or get run over by “the bus” — but on Tuesday Ohio voters left serious tread marks...

  5. 20 mar 2011 · SB 5 would reduce collective bargaining rights of all public workers in the state. Kasich and supporters argue the changes are needed to help public employers control labor costs. Organized labor...

  6. 12 paź 2011 · On March 31, 2011, Ohio Governor John Kasich signed into law Senate Bill 5 (SB 5), limiting the collective bargaining rights of public employees in Ohio.

  7. On March 2nd, 2011, the Ohio Senate narrowly passed Senate Bill 5, legislation aimed at eliminating collective bargaining rights for public employees. The Senate passed the bill by a single vote, despite passionate, bipartisan

  1. Ludzie szukają również