Martin Drake is a student at Harvard Law School.
The U.S. may be facing its largest labor strike in decades, as the vast majority of UPS’s 260,000 Teamsters voted to strike if their union can’t reach an agreement with their employer, CBS News reports. The current UPS-Teamsters contract expires on July 31, 2018. The last strike by UPS workers, in 1997, lasted more than two weeks. As we’ve previously reported, the current bargaining comes in the midst of UPS attempting to modify scheduling in order to keep up with demand from the booming e-commerce sector.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested 114 undocumented workers in a single operation this week, CNN reports. In an intense show of force against the migrant workers, around 200 ICE personnel were involved in the roundup. The majority of the workers were Mexican citizens. According to ICE administrators, this type of crackdown can be expected to continue.
Writing in the Guardian, Senator Bernie Sanders made a fervent call for solidarity with Disneyland workers who are fighting for a living wage. The senator describes how around one in 10 Disneyland workers report being homeless, and over two-thirds experience food insecurity. He pointed out that this situation is not unique—American wages are stagnant, and over 40 percent of Americans can’t afford a $400 “unexpected financial expense like a medical emergency or car repair.” Sanders writes that readers should not embrace our model of “ruthless capitalism,” and calls on Americans to join the workers fighting for better wages and conditions.
As if to exemplify the senator’s “ruthless capitalism,” California’s Division of Labor Standards Enforcement has cited Bay Area businesses for over $10 million in wage theft, SF Gate reports. Half of that total comes from a single employer, Kome Japanese Seafood Buffet in Daly City. The allegations include violations of minimum wage and overtime laws, along with illegal confiscation of server’s tips.
The California wage theft news comes just as a new report from Jobs with Justice and Good Jobs First documents billions of dollars paid out in wage theft cases by some of the country’s largest companies since 2000. According to the report, Walmart alone has paid $1.4 billion in wage theft penalties in the new millennium. FedEx and Bank of America, and Wells Fargo all paid hundreds of millions of dollars in penalties for stolen wages. Those massive numbers come despite the fact that the vast majority of these cases are settled by the employers before trial, with trial verdicts deciding just 1.7 percent of the cases examined in the report.
Daily News & Commentary
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March 16
Starbucks' union negotiations are resurrected; jobs data is released.
March 15
A U.S. District Court issues a preliminary injunction against the Department of Veterans Affairs for terminating its collective bargaining agreement, and SEIU files a lawsuit against DHS for effectively terminating immigrant workers at Boston Logan International Airport.
March 13
Republican Senators urge changes on OSHA heat standard; OpenAI and building trades announce partnership on data center construction; forced labor investigations could lead to new tariffs
March 12
EPA terminates contract with second-largest union; Florida advances bill restricting public sector unions; Trump administration seeks Supreme Court assistance in TPS termination.
March 11
The partial government shutdown results in TSA agents losing their first full paycheck; the Fifth Circuit upholds the certification of a class of former United Airline workers who were placed on unpaid leave for declining to receive the COVID-19 vaccine for religious reasons during the pandemic; and an academic group files a lawsuit against the State Department over a policy that revokes and denies visas to noncitizens for their work in fact-checking and content moderation.
March 10
Court rules Kari Lake unlawfully led USAGM, voiding mass layoffs; Florida Senate passes bill tightening union recertification rules; Fifth Circuit revives whistleblower suit against Lockheed Martin.