According to the Los Angeles Times, California’s robust job growth conceals a worrisome trend. While the state has recovered all of the jobs lost since the recession, most of the growth has been in the low wage sector; there are fewer mid-wage jobs paying between 15 and 30 dollars per hour available. Economists warn that “[m]iddle-wage stagnation can damage consumer spending, dent career mobility, stall home buying and exacerbate [the] poverty rate.”
The New York Times reports on working conditions for New York agricultural workers, many of whom work 14-hour days for an $8 per hour minimum wage and no overtime. Agricultural workers are excluded from many federal wage and hour and labor protections, and only a handful of states have instituted their own protections for farm workers. In New York, advocates for workers’ rights, facing stiff opposition from farmers’ groups, have thus far failed to pass legislation protecting agricultural workers.
According to the Associated Press, unionized workers at the Metropolitan Opera are in the midst of negotiations and hope to avoid a threatened lockout. Facing a budget shortfall, the Met has demanded that unions accept salary cuts of around 17 percent.
In international news, the Wall Street Journal reports on disappointing Canadian employment numbers, as the country added just 200 jobs last month. Over the last year, overall employment has increased by just 0.7 percent, and all of that growth has been in part-time work.
Daily News & Commentary
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May 1
Workers and unions organize May Day; and Volkswagen challenges NLRB regional directors.
April 30
US Circuit Court of Appeals renders decision on Jefferson Standard test; construction subcontractors settle over wage theft in Minnesota; union and immigrant groups urge walkout.
April 29
DOJ sues for discrimination against US citizens; Musk and DOJ pause litigation on AI discrimination bill; USTR hosts forced labor tariff hearings.
April 28
Supreme Court grants cert on Labor Department judges' authority; Apple store union files NLRB charge; cannabis workers win unionization rights
April 27
Nike announces layoffs; Tillis withdraws objection on Fed nominee; and consumer sentiment hits record low.
April 26
Screenwriters in the Writers Guild of America vote to ratify a four-year agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, and teachers in Los Angeles vote to ratify a two-year agreement with the Los Angeles Unified School District.