
Rachel Sandalow-Ash is a student at Harvard Law School and a member of the Labor and Employment Lab.
800 adjunct and non-tenure-track (NTT) faculty at Fordham University reached their first contract with the university earlier this week. Fordham NTT faculty — represented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) — won 67%-90% raises for most adjuncts; a minimum salary of $64,000 by end of the contract for full-time NTT faculty; longer-term appointments; just cause protections; and professional development support.
Following recent news of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountain’s attempts to overturn a vote in favor of unionization (as covered by OnLabor here), Erin Hager writes in Rewire, “Planned Parenthood Has a History of Trying To Beat Back Labor Unions.” Hager explains that “out of 56 Planned Parenthood affiliates across the United States, only five are unionized,” and that at a number of regional Planned Parenthood branches, management has attempted to shut down union efforts or has refused to bargain with workers after they won a union election.
On Thursday, President Trump signed an executive order creating a “Council for the American Worker,” which will consolidate existing federal job training initiatives and expand apprenticeship and retraining programs. The New York Times reports that, as part of this new initiative, “companies and trade unions have committed to funding nearly four million slots for apprenticeships” over the next five years. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are currently slightly more available jobs than there are unemployed workers available to fill those jobs. While companies continue to complain that they can’t find qualified workers to fill open positions, many people have challenged the skills gap theory. These researchers and commentators arguing that stagnant wage growth demonstrates that companies — often benefitting from increasing monopsony power — are refusing to raise wages to attract qualified workers.
In cultural news, ‘Sorry to Bother You,’ Boots Riley’s “anticapitalist black comedy,” is winning increased popular attention and critical acclaim. This film follows Cassius Green, a young black telemarketer in Oakland, who struggles between joining his friends and coworkers on strike and using his “white voice” to ascend the corporate ranks in order to sell weapons and slave labor. Derek Robertson writes in Politico that ‘Sorry to Bother You’ is “2018’s Sharpest Political Satire.” Eileen Jones writes in Jacobin, “Boots Riley’s ‘Sorry to Bother You’ captures the crude madness that we live in every day under capitalism.” Patt Morrison interviewed Boots Riley for the Los Angeles Times, and Cady Lang interviewed Boots Riley for Time.
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
May 2
Immigrant detainees win class certification; Missouri sick leave law in effect; OSHA unexpectedly continues Biden-Era Worker Heat Rule
May 1
SEIU 721 concludes a 48-hour unfair labor practice strike; NLRB Administrative Law Judge holds that Starbucks committed a series of unfair labor practices at a store in Philadelphia; AFSCME and UPTE members at the University of California are striking.
April 30
In today’s news and commentary, SEIU seeks union rights for rideshare drivers in California, New Jersey proposes applying the ABC Test, and Board officials push back on calls for layoffs. In California, Politico reports that an SEIU-backed bill that would allow rideshare drivers to join unions has passed out of committee, “clear[ing] its first hurdle.” […]
April 29
In today’s news and commentary, CFPB mass layoffs paused again, Mine Safety agency rejects union intervention, and postdoctoral researchers petition for union election. A temporary pause on mass firings at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has been restored. After a trial court initially blocked the administration from mass firings, the appeals court modified that […]
April 28
WA strike bill goes to governor; MLBPA discloses legal expenses; Ex-Twitter employees seek class certification against Musk.
April 27
Judge thwarts Trump's attempt to strip federal workers' labor rights; AFGE to cut over half of its staff; Harvard unions rally amid attacks.