As the NLRB continues its comment period for a proposed rule to codify a more restrictive standard for joint employer status, NLRB General Counsel Peter Robb has voiced his view that the rule does not go far enough in insulating lead employers from labor law liability. In comments made yesterday, Robb said that a joint employer should have no obligation to bargain with a union if it does not control “all listed terms and conditions of employment.” The NLRB has again extended its comment period for the rulemaking, now until January 14. For the time being, the 2015 Browning-Ferris decision continues to govern, meaning the Board is still able to consider “indirect control” and “reserved authority” as part of the joint employer inquiry.
Yesterday the Court of Appeal in the United Kingdom upheld 2016 Employment Tribunal and 2017 Employment Appeal Tribunal decisions finding that Uber drivers are employees entitled to basic worker protections. The decision was 2-1. The majority held that Uber contracts with passengers to provide driving services, which the drivers perform for it, while the dissent characterized Uber as only an intermediary for drivers working as independent contractors. The ruling was celebrated by the United Private Hire Drivers branch of the Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain (IWGB). Uber received permission to appeal to the Supreme Court.
United Teachers Los Angeles, the union representing teachers and other non-administrative staff in the Los Angeles Unified School District, announced yesterday that it would go on strike on January 10 if its demands for a new contract were not met. The union has been fighting for bread-and-butter issues like a 6.5 percent pay increase retroactive to July 1, 2016, but also for policies they argue will improve education for students such as smaller class sizes and less standardized testing. The school district proposed a 6 percent pay hike with a 3 percent retroactive raise for last school year. The district’s offer also included more compensation for teachers enrolled in professional development courses and class size caps in the most under-resourced schools. The potential strike follows months of collective action by teachers fighting for improved working and learning conditions across the country.
Yesterday the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate for the fourth time this year, bringing it to a range between 2.25 and 2.5 percent. Josh Bivens of the Economic Policy Institute argues that this will harm working people, “threaten[ing] to snuff out the very beginning of wage gains that we’ve started to see recently in the data.”
In Minnesota, public sector union membership is on the rise despite this past summer’s ruling in Janus v. AFSCME. The Minnesota Association for Professional Employees saw membership increase from approximately 10,500 to over 11,000, and Education Minnesota also saw more sign-ups than opt-outs. The unions credit the spike to their organizing work in preparation for the Supreme Court decision striking down agency fees in June.
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
October 7
The Supreme Court kicks off its latest term, granting and declining certiorari in several labor-related cases.
October 6
EEOC regains quorum; Second Circuit issues opinion on DEI causing hostile work environment.
October 5
In today’s news and commentary, HELP committee schedules a vote on Trump’s NLRB nominees, the 5th Circuit rejects Amazon’s request for en banc review, and TV production workers win their first union contract. After a nomination hearing on Wednesday, the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee scheduled a committee vote on President Trump’s NLRB nominees […]
October 3
California legislation empowers state labor board; ChatGPT used in hostile workplace case; more lawsuits challenge ICE arrests
October 2
AFGE and AFSCME sue in response to the threat of mass firings; another preliminary injunction preventing Trump from stripping some federal workers of collective bargaining rights; and challenges to state laws banning captive audience meetings.
September 30
the NTEU petitions for reconsideration for the CFPB layoff scheme, an insurance company defeats a FLSA claim, and a construction company violated the NLRA by surveilling its unionized workers.