Jon Weinberg is a student at Harvard Law School.
Today is Equal Pay Day, yet equal pay for equal work is still far from a reality. Read our coverage of how pay transparency may or may not be a solution, and how new EEO reporting requirements might be a step in the right direction.
36,000 Verizon workers are set to strike tomorrow morning, in what could become one of the largest labor disruptions in modern American history. The New York Times reports that the two unions calling for the strike “represent customer service workers, installers, repairmen and other technicians for the company’s so-called wireline network” and have made little progress in 8 months of negotiations. The unions are willing to compromise with Verizon on health care costs, but note Verizon has not committed to “protecting well-paying jobs and expanding the ranks of the workers who have them.” The CWA and IBEW strike deadline announcement can be read here.
San Francisco transit workers, on the other hand, will likely avoid a strike under a new agreement reached yesterday. The San Francisco Examiner notes that a tentative agreement between Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) and unions extends the existing contract by four years, with limited changes for inflation. Furthermore, “under the new tentative agreement, BART workers’ wages will increase about 2.6 percent a year to keep pace with inflation, officials said. The unions — SEIU 1021, AFSCME Local 3993 and ATU Local 1555 — have 30 days to ratify the agreement. The deal heads off potential strikes in 2017, the deadline for an agreement. Once enacted, the contract will be in place until 2021.”
California’s landmark family-leave law has been signed by Gov. Jerry Brown, according to The Los Angeles Times. The new law “will allow people earning close to minimum wage to be paid 70% of their salary while on leave, while workers with higher pay, up to $108,000 annually, will get 60% of their salary during leave. The change takes effect in 2018. It comes one week after California raised its minimum wage to $15 by 2022.”
A scorecard produced by the National Federation of Independent Businesses shows that Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland has a tendency to rule in favor of federal agencies on labor issues, as previously reported here. The Hill notes that “in labor cases, NFIB found that Garland agreed with federal agencies 79 percent of the time, while businesses in labor cases lost 95 percent of the time.”
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
July 3
Unions seek a preliminary injunction to prevent USDA downsizing; the D.C. District Court issues a preliminary injunction against new student loan regulations; Matt Bruenig releases an analysis of Starbucks’ ongoing legal battle against Starbucks Workers United.
July 2
First Circuit denies federal worker unions’ mandamus petition; federal court denies preliminary injunction against new union reporting rule; House introduces the Securing Agriculture’s Workforce Act.
July 1
Trump nominates Keith Sonderling as Labor Secretary; DOL eliminates disparate-impact liability from Title VI regulations; OPM finalizes rule allowing suitability-based removal of federal employees for post-appointment conduct.
June 30
SCOTUS ends removal protections for agencies; staff at NYC cocktail bar vote to unionize.
June 29
In today’s News and Commentary, student-athletes file a class action suit challenging the NCAA’s new Age-Based Rule, a federal judge declines to issue a preliminary injunction against FEMA’s reduction in force but expedites proceedings, and Gavin Newsom opposes California’s proposed billionaire tax in favor of a federal approach. On Thursday, DeJuan Campbell, at basketball player […]
June 28
Philadelphia utility workers announce July 4 strike; national parks workers vote to unionize; Michigan considers “right to disconnect” bill.