Edward Nasser is a student at Harvard Law School.
The Atlantic reports that the #metoo movement has yet to deliver justice for low-wage workers who are victims of sexual harassment. The piece explains that sexual harassment is rampant in low-wage industries–50% of workers in the restaurant industry reported facing “scary” or “unwanted” sexual advances in a 2014 report–the difficulty in proving claims and risk of retaliation causes many to stay quiet.
The New York Times. Workers at these companies face uncertain labor conditions, with the constant looming threat of layoffs or wage cuts. In the last few months, 50 employees at Mashable were let go after the digital publisher Ziff Davis bought the website for $50 million, BuzzFeed fired 100 editorial employees after missing its revenue targets, and Refinery29 laid off 34 staff members.
The NLRB abandoned its 2011 ruling in Specialty Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center of Mobile on the issue of which employees can vote to form or join an existing union. In that case, the NLRB announced that unions could organize “micro units” of “readily identifiable” employees who shared employment commonalities. The Board announced it would revert to a “community of interest” test to determine who can be in a bargaining unit based on how workers are classified and organized, the types of jobs they do, and their skills and training.
While the Trump administration seems set to continue rolling back Obama-era protections for workers, some states are taking it upon themselves to pick up the slack. In recent years, New York has increased its minimum wage, expanded overtime eligibility, mandated more scheduling regularity, and enacted a paid family leave program. In part to combat the Trump administrations proposed “tip pooling” rule, New York is considering changing a law that allows employers to pay tipped workers less than the standard minimum wage provided that the difference is made up in tips.
Daily News & Commentary
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November 7
A challenge to a federal PLA requirement; a delayed hearing on collective bargaining; and the IRS announces relief from "no tax on tips" reporting requirements.
November 6
Starbucks workers authorize a strike; Sixth Circuit rejects Thryv remedies; OPEIU tries to intervene to defend the NLRB.
November 5
Denver Labor helps workers recover over $2.3 million in unpaid wages; the Eighth Circuit denies a request for an en ban hearing on Minnesota’s ban on captive audience meetings; and many top labor unions break from AFGE’s support for a Republican-backed government funding bill.
November 4
Second Circuit declines to revive musician’s defamation claims against former student; Trump administration adds new eligibility requirements for employers under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program; major labor unions break with the AFGE's stance on the government shutdown.
November 3
Fifth Circuit rejects Thryv remedies, Third Circuit considers applying Ames to NJ statute, and some circuits relax McDonnell Douglas framework.
November 2
In today’s news and commentary, states tackle “stay-or-pay” contracts, a new preliminary injunction bars additional shutdown layoffs, and two federal judges order the Trump administration to fund SNAP. Earlier this year, NLRB acting general counsel William Cowen rescinded a 2024 NLRB memo targeting “stay-or-pay” contracts. Former General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo had declared that these kinds […]