Vail Kohnert-Yount is a student at Harvard Law School.
“Public Servants Are Losing Their Foothold in the Middle Class” was the front page headline of the New York Times yesterday. The Times reported that the “steady erosion of the public sector” has contributed to the decline of the middle class in recent decades. Severe budget cuts have reduced government jobs such that state and local employees now represent the smallest share of the American civilian workforce since 1967. Public sector employees who are still at work endure low wages and limited resources, which are among the reasons why public school teachers in Arizona, Kentucky, Oklahoma, and West Virginia have said they are striking in recent weeks.
On Friday, Senator Cory Booker announced his support for the Federal Jobs Guarantee Development Act. As reported by Vox, the act would establish a three-year pilot program for 15 local areas chosen by the Department of Labor that would guarantee a job paying at least $15 an hour with paid leave and health benefits for every adult living in those areas. In 2016, Slate’s Jamelle Bouie called a federal jobs guarantee “a road map for success in Trump’s America” for Democrats looking for electoral victory. It remains to be seen if other Democrats will support such a strategy.
With increased calls for promoting diversity in hiring on the Hill, advocates are asking U.S. Senators to commit to paying their interns a living wage. According to data from Pay Our Interns, 26 Republican and 21 Democratic senators pay their interns in some form, including Senators Doug Jones and Bernie Sanders, who pay their interns a living wage of $15 an hour. Last month’s $1.3 trillion omnibus package increased senators’ personnel and office expense budgets by 9%, which some argue they should use to pay their interns.
April continues to be an eventful month for graduate student workers at Ivy League universities. After Harvard graduate students voted to form a union with the United Auto Workers last week, Harvard University spokesperson Anna G. Cowenhoven twice declined to say if the university will bargain with the union, reported the Harvard Crimson. Since graduate student workers at Columbia University voted to unionize in December 2016, the university has refused to bargain, and student workers voted earlier this month to authorize a strike, with 93% voting yes. Unless the university comes to the bargaining table, Columbia graduate student workers plan to go on strike today until April 30, the last day of classes for the semester.
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
July 11
Regional director orders election without Board quorum; 9th Circuit pauses injunction on Executive Order; Driverless car legislation in Massachusetts
July 10
Wisconsin Supreme Court holds UW Health nurses are not covered by Wisconsin’s Labor Peace Act; a district judge denies the request to stay an injunction pending appeal; the NFLPA appeals an arbitration decision.
July 9
the Supreme Court allows Trump to proceed with mass firings; Secretary of Agriculture suggests Medicaid recipients replace deported migrant farmworkers; DHS ends TPS for Nicaragua and Honduras
July 8
In today’s news and commentary, Apple wins at the Fifth Circuit against the NLRB, Florida enacts a noncompete-friendly law, and complications with the No Tax on Tips in the Big Beautiful Bill. Apple won an appeal overturning a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) decision that the company violated labor law by coercively questioning an employee […]
July 7
LA economy deals with fallout from ICE raids; a new appeal challenges the NCAA antitrust settlement; and the EPA places dissenting employees on leave.
July 6
Municipal workers in Philadelphia continue to strike; Zohran Mamdani collects union endorsements; UFCW grocery workers in California and Colorado reach tentative agreements.