Earlier this week, the Office of Management and Budget announced that it was issuing a review and stay on President Obama’s EEO-1 pay data collection rule, in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act. The rule would have required all employers, not just federal contractors, with 100 or more employees to report wages paid to employees by gender, race, and ethnicity. The OMB decided such data collection would be too burdensome, stating in a memo that “[a]mong other things, OMB is concerned that some aspects of the revised collection of information lack practical utility, are unnecessarily burdensome, and do not adequately address privacy and confidentiality issues.” The rule was originally devised to bring transparency to data collection and decrease the gender wage gap. Publishing data may have also shamed some organizations to take proactive steps to mend the wage gap. The New York Times opinion page discusses the decline of the number of women in the workforce generally in the last decade.
In other wage news, on Friday, the Canadian Women’s Hockey League announced it would begin paying its players a stipend, for the first time in its 11-year history. Attention to equitable pay in sports generally and hockey specifically was raised earlier this year, when the U.S. women’s national hockey team staged a successful boycott of the World Championships unless U.S.A. Hockey agreed to better wages and benefits equitable to those received by the men’s national team. The New York Times reports.A New York Times piece highlights rising inequality by focusing on the resources available to two janitorial workers at major corporations, decades apart: one as an employee of Kodak, and another as a contractor of Apple. As major corporations have become more profitable by cutting the number of employees, repercussions for the middle class grow.
In addition to the proliferation of Uber and Lyft, new apps allow consumers to crowdsource funds for buses and commutes. Though public transit often breaks down, increased use of private transport for commuting could have disastrous effects on public transport. The Washington Post reports.
The August jobs report detailed an additional 156,000 jobs in August, which fell a tad short of the 179,000 economists were expecting. The Wall Street Journal reports the numbers. Though additional jobs were slightly dulled this month, American factory activity has reached a 6 year high. Though factories lost more than two million jobs in the recession, but have clawed their way back and recovered more than one million positions since 2010. The New York Times reports.
Daily News & Commentary
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September 16
In today’s news and commentary, the NLRB sues New York, a flight attendant sues United, and the Third Circuit considers the employment status of Uber drivers The NLRB sued New York to block a new law that would grant the state authority over private-sector labor disputes. As reported on recently by Finlay, the law, which […]
September 15
Unemployment claims rise; a federal court hands victory to government employees union; and employers fire workers over social media posts.
September 14
Workers at Boeing reject the company’s third contract proposal; NLRB Acting General Counsel William Cohen plans to sue New York over the state’s trigger bill; Air Canada flight attendants reject a tentative contract.
September 12
Zohran Mamdani calls on FIFA to end dynamic pricing for the World Cup; the San Francisco Office of Labor Standards Enforcement opens a probe into Scale AI’s labor practices; and union members organize immigration defense trainings.
September 11
California rideshare deal advances; Boeing reaches tentative agreement with union; FTC scrutinizes healthcare noncompetes.
September 10
A federal judge denies a motion by the Trump Administration to dismiss a lawsuit led by the American Federation of Government Employees against President Trump for his mass layoffs of federal workers; the Supreme Court grants a stay on a federal district court order that originally barred ICE agents from questioning and detaining individuals based on their presence at a particular location, the type of work they do, their race or ethnicity, and their accent while speaking English or Spanish; and a hospital seeks to limit OSHA's ability to cite employers for failing to halt workplace violence without a specific regulation in place.