In December, we reported that the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission established a pay formula for drivers of transportation network companies like Uber, Lyft, and Juno. The formula would set a minimum pay standard of $17.22 an hour after expenses. But just days before the standard is set to go into effect on February 1, Lyft and Juno are suing to stop it, claiming that the rule puts them at a competitive disadvantage against market dominant Uber. Under the Commission’s standard, “[t]he companies with lower utilization rates would be required to pay higher driver compensation per trip to offset the time their drivers are waiting for a dispatch.” Lyft and Juno think this would benefit Uber at their expense since Uber “can offer drivers more rides, and so less waiting time.”
Yesterday the Eleventh Circuit voted to grant rehearing en banc in Lewis v. Governor of Alabama. In 2015, the City Council of Birmingham, Alabama passed an ordinance to raise the City’s minimum wage to $10.10 by 2017. The day after the ordinance was signed into law, Alabama’s Governor approved the Uniform Minimum Wage and Right-to-Work Act, a bill preempting local workplace regulations. Birmingham residents making less than $10.10 challenged the Act in part on equal protection grounds, claiming that the majority-white state legislature intentionally discriminated against Birmingham’s majority-black population by passing the bill in a vote split along racial lines. The district court dismissed the complaint. But in July, an Eleventh Circuit panel allowed the residents’ intentional discrimination claim to move forward when it held that the plaintiffs pled sufficient facts to state a plausible claim of racial discrimination under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. That panel’s opinion has now been vacated, and the full Eleventh Circuit will rehear the case.
The topic of unionization dominated Amazon’s appearance before the New York City Council yesterday for a hearing about the company’s planned headquarters in Queens. As Bloomberg reported in December, workers at Amazon’s Staten Island fulfillment center recently went public with a campaign to unionize with the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU). Yesterday Council Speaker Corey Johnson asked Amazon’s representative if the company would agree to neutrality, to which the representative said no. The company has pledged to use union labor for the construction of the Queens site. Outside the hearing yesterday, RWDSU and the Teamsters protested against Amazon’s arrival in the city, while 32BJ SEIU and the Building and Construction Trade Council rallied in favor of it.
The New York Magazine Union announced that employer New York Media voluntarily recognized the union after several weeks of negotiations over bargaining unit composition and a card check conducted by the American Arbitration Association. The bargaining unit contains 180 editorial staff, including the print and web staff of the magazine and its verticals. The staff will be represented by the NewsGuild of New York, an affiliate of the Communications Workers of America.
Daily News & Commentary
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November 24
Labor leaders criticize tariffs; White House cancels jobs report; and student organizers launch chaperone program for noncitizens.
November 23
Workers at the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority vote to authorize a strike; Washington State legislators consider a bill empowering public employees to bargain over workplace AI implementation; and University of California workers engage in a two-day strike.
November 21
The “Big Three” record labels make a deal with an AI music streaming startup; 30 stores join the now week-old Starbucks Workers United strike; and the Mine Safety and Health Administration draws scrutiny over a recent worker death.
November 20
Law professors file brief in Slaughter; New York appeals court hears arguments about blog post firing; Senate committee delays consideration of NLRB nominee.
November 19
A federal judge blocks the Trump administration’s efforts to cancel the collective bargaining rights of workers at the U.S. Agency for Global Media; Representative Jared Golden secures 218 signatures for a bill that would repeal a Trump administration executive order stripping federal workers of their collective bargaining rights; and Dallas residents sue the City of Dallas in hopes of declaring hundreds of ordinances that ban bias against LGBTQ+ individuals void.
November 18
A federal judge pressed DOJ lawyers to define “illegal” DEI programs; Peco Foods prevails in ERISA challenge over 401(k) forfeitures; D.C. court restores collective bargaining rights for Voice of America workers; Rep. Jared Golden secures House vote on restoring federal workers' union rights.