Updated at 3:25 p.m. with law suspended — With the submission of more than 300,000 signatures Friday, Missouri’s right-to-work law won't go into effect Aug. 28 and its fate likely will be put to voters in 2018.

The law is suspended, Secretary of State spokeswoman Maura Browning told St. Louis Public Radio. The office still needs to verify that at least 100,000 of the signatures are from registered voters — the minimum to force a statewide vote in November 2018.

She said the count will take weeks and that if there isn't enough, the law will be put in place.

More than 1,000 union members packed the rotunda at the state Capitol this morning, and then many marched down the street to Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft’s office, where they turned over the petitions.



“It’s not about one party, whether you’re a Democrat or a Republican,” according to Billy Dicken, a Harviell resident and member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. “It’s not even about who the governor is upstairs, even though we don’t agree. It’s all about the voters, and letting us decide what we need for our families.”

The right-to-work law would bar unions and employers from requiring all workers in a bargaining unit to pay dues or fees. The General Assembly swiftly passed the law during the regular session and then-Gov. Eric Greitens signed it in February.

State Sen. Bob Onder, a Republican from Lake St. Louis, is among the law’s major supporters. He cast the union effort as unfair to workers and the public.

“Union bosses are attempting to stifle the will of Missouri voters who voted for a pro-Right-to-Work legislature and governor in order to create jobs and protect workers,” Onder said in a statement sent out by the Liberty Alliance, a political action committee that supports the law. “Every signature must be examined to protect the integrity of the referendum process.”

This is a developing story.

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