Hannah Belitz is a student at Harvard Law School.
The Detroit teachers’ sickout has shut down almost all of Detroit’s public schools. As the New York Times explains, this is not the first major sickout of the year, but it is the “first sanctioned and organized by their union, the 2,600-member Detroit Federation of Teachers,” signaling the rising severity of the crisis in Detroit Public Schools.
Politico reports that two new misclassification suits have been filed against Uber: one in Florida and one in Illinois. Both allege misclassification, but the lawsuit in Illinois goes further and “tries to recover tips that were earned but stolen by Uber, or were lost due to [Uber’s] communications and policies.” According to Brian Mahany, the attorney for the Illinois Uber drivers, “Uber tried to piecemeal this and said, ‘OK, we’ll just settle with California and Massachusetts drivers.’ That’s like sticking your finger in a dam when there’s water pouring out all over the place.”
Communication Workers of America, the union representing the striking Verizon workers, and several consumer groups have filed an informal complaint with the FCC, alleging that Verizon engaged in “institutional deception” by “systemically deceiving customers, refusing to fix the phone lines of customers on its traditional copper network, and forcing them to switch to the company’s fiber network or lose all service.” According to the New York Times, Verizon executives have denied any deception and claim that “the complaint [is] a bargaining tactic” by the striking union. The union, for its part, has said that it simply wants customers to “be able to make this choice without pressure, threats and deception from Verizon.”
In international news, the Washington Post reports that May Day protests in Paris turned extremely violent, highlighting deeper social and economic problems in France. France’s current unemployment rate is slightly above 10 percent, just below its record high in the mid-1990s. The Post notes that similar protests were held around the world, and although May Day, or International Workers’s Day, usually brings protests, the ones this year “seemed to be marked by a particular fervor and a palpable sense of unrest.”
Daily News & Commentary
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December 22
Worker-friendly legislation enacted in New York; UW Professor wins free speech case; Trucking company ordered to pay $23 million to Teamsters.
December 21
Argentine unions march against labor law reform; WNBA players vote to authorize a strike; and the NLRB prepares to clear its backlog.
December 19
Labor law professors file an amici curiae and the NLRB regains quorum.
December 18
New Jersey adopts disparate impact rules; Teamsters oppose railroad merger; court pauses more shutdown layoffs.
December 17
The TSA suspends a labor union representing 47,000 officers for a second time; the Trump administration seeks to recruit over 1,000 artificial intelligence experts to the federal workforce; and the New York Times reports on the tumultuous changes that U.S. labor relations has seen over the past year.
December 16
Second Circuit affirms dismissal of former collegiate athletes’ antitrust suit; UPS will invest $120 million in truck-unloading robots; Sharon Block argues there are reasons for optimism about labor’s future.