Randon Herrera is a student at Harvard Law School.
As businesses continue to feel the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, employers are increasingly turning to work-sharing as an alternative to layoffs. Work-share programs, which are now being offered in at least 29 states, involve a work scheme where employees become eligible to receive unemployment benefits proportionate to lost hours if they have their hours reduced. This allows employers to cut hours in lieu of cutting workers, with the understanding that the government will help support their workers. While the concept of work-sharing has never taken off in the US, the federal CARES Act provides $100 million in grants for states to enact work-sharing programs, and also covers 50% of the benefit payments. Though more business are cuing in and adopting work-sharing schemes, states without work-sharing programs have been slow to take advantage of the federal assistance to enact such programs.
According to several labor and employment experts, current working conditions are speeding up an already rising trend of worker surveillance. For instance, companies like Amazon are using surveillance technology to better police and enforce social distancing in their warehouses. Amazon infamously already heavily surveils its employees to increase productivity. Worker surveillance is even finding its way into people’s homes. As more and more workers transition to remote work, many companies are taking advantage of software that allows them to track workers’ computer usage. Use of such software to monitor remote work is not new. But it is increasing. Activity monitoring software companies AciveTrak, Time Doctor, Teramind, and Hubstaff have all reported increased demand for their products.
According to one estimate, over 100,000 airline employees may lose their jobs by the end of 2020. In exchange for federal assistance received earlier this month, major airlines agreed to suspend layoffs for at least six months. However, United Airlines is on record stating that it plans to begin cutting jobs as soon as it is permitted to on October 1 of this year.
The Supreme Court declined to review a Second Circuit decision that raised the question of what threshold employees must meet to prove disability discrimination by their employer. The petitioner, Natofsky, a former director at the New York City Department of Investigations, sued the city under a federal disability bias statute after being terminated. In his petition for certiorari, he argued that a showing that his disability had constituted at least one animus for his termination should be sufficient to prove his claim. The Second Circuit, in contrast, ruled that he needed to show that he would not have been terminated but for his disability.
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May 8
Court upholds DOL farmworker protections; Fifth Circuit rejects Amazon appeal; NJTransit navigates negotiations and potential strike.
May 7
U.S. Department of Labor announces termination of mental health and child care benefits for its employees; SEIU pursues challenge of NLRB's 2020 joint employer rule in the D.C. Circuit; Columbia University lays off 180 researchers
May 6
HHS canceled a scheduled bargaining session with the FDA's largest workers union; members of 1199SEIU voted out longtime union president George Gresham in rare leadership upset.
May 5
Unemployment rates for Black women go up under Trump; NLRB argues Amazon lacks standing to challenge captive audience meeting rule; Teamsters use Wilcox's reinstatement orders to argue against injunction.
May 4
In today’s news and commentary, DOL pauses the 2024 gig worker rule, a coalition of unions, cities, and nonprofits sues to stop DOGE, and the Chicago Teachers Union reaches a remarkable deal. On May 1, the Department of Labor announced it would pause enforcement of the Biden Administration’s independent contractor classification rule. Under the January […]
May 2
Immigrant detainees win class certification; Missouri sick leave law in effect; OSHA unexpectedly continues Biden-Era Worker Heat Rule