Yesterday, President Trump privately issued an executive order imposing work requirements on able-bodied recipients of food stamps, Medicaid, and low-income housing subsidies. The order, entitled “Reducing Poverty in America,” requires all cabinet departments to produce plans that impose work requirements on recipients within 90 days. President Trump has referred to all need-based aid and public health safety net programs as “welfare,” which is a term traditionally used for cash assistance programs like Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
Pro cheerleaders from the NBA, NFL, and NHL say that team officials have exploited them for profit by sending them into gatherings where they are subjected to offensive sexual comments and unwanted touches by fans. The cheerleaders are expected to do this as part of their job.
Yesterday was Equal Pay Day. Lily Ledbetter, the plaintiff in Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, writes about how her story and Equal Pay Day intersects with the #MeToo movement and how both movements are fighting back against the devaluing of women in the workplace. In Ledbetter, the Supreme Court held that Ms. Ledbetter could not bring a salary discrimination suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 when she received the lesser pay during the statutory period of limitations, but when the discriminatory pay decisions occurred outside of the limitations period.
But women who have complaints to file against their employers may run up against delay as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is cash strapped and receiving more complaints in the wake of the #MeToo movement. Last year, a federal employee filing a complaint waited, on average, 543 days for a resolution. About 1 in 5 EEOC complainants are men; this rate has been relatively consistent in the past decade.
Despite previously refusing to allow students to vote on unionization in December of 2017, Georgetown University administrators decided last week to allow its students to vote. The vote allows for a type of privately negotiated pact of voluntary recognition, thereby bypassing the NLRB and any fears that the new NLRB might overturn protections for students to unionize.
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
August 15
Columbia University quietly replaces graduate student union labor with non-union adjunct workers; the DC Circuit Court lifts the preliminary injunction on CFPB firings; and Grubhub to pay $24.75M to settle California driver class action.
August 14
Judge Pechman denies the Trump Administration’s motion to dismiss claims brought by unions representing TSA employees; the Trump Administration continues efforts to strip federal employees of collective bargaining rights; and the National Association of Agriculture Employees seeks legal relief after the USDA stopped recognizing the union.
August 13
The United Auto Workers (UAW) seek to oust President Shawn Fain ahead of next year’s election; Columbia University files an unfair labor practice (ULP) charge against the Student Workers of Columbia-United Auto Workers for failing to bargain in “good faith”; and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) terminates its collective bargaining agreement with four unions representing its employees.
August 12
Trump nominates new BLS commissioner; municipal taxpayers' suit against teachers' union advances; antitrust suit involving sheepherders survives motion to dismiss
August 11
Updates on two-step FLSA certification, Mamdani's $30 minimum wage proposal, dangers of "bossware."
August 10
NLRB Acting GC issues new guidance on ULPs, Trump EO on alternative assets in401(k)s, and a vetoed Wisconsin bill on rideshare driver status