Deanna Krokos is a student at Harvard Law School
This week, the Economic Policy Institute published an analysis of the growing role state attorneys general (AGs) play in enforcing workers’ rights. Authored by Terri Gerstein, who heads the State and Local Enforcement Project at Harvard Law School’s Labor and Worklife Program, the report examines state enforcement actions since 2018, including initiatives that protect workers during the coronavirus pandemic. The report focuses on efforts to combat wage theft, employee misclassification, and improper noncompete contracts among other key issues.
The report offers both analysis and instruction; the progress in certain states reflects a first step toward remedying decades of under-enforcement. Gerstein reports that “only 8 states & the District of Columbia have dedicated workers’ rights units within state AGs offices,” 6 of which were created in the past 5 years. In early 2018, Politico reported on state-level minimum wage enforcement, tasked to both AG offices and state agencies. The report revealed severe under-investment ; 6 states employed 0 investigators to handle minimum wage violations, and 26 more employed fewer than 10.
The report calls on more state AGs to take an active role in the workers’ rights arena. When properly resourced, state AGs have strategic enforcement advantages– investigating these cases can be extremely complicated; employees risk retaliation or reputational harms; and crucially, states are not bound by arbitration agreements that keep workers out of court. Further, Gerstein notes that common violations like wage theft and misclassification are endemic to particular, often low-wage industries like landscaping or food service, disproportionately impacting marginalized workers.
This week, the Department of Labor issued new guidance further limiting the availability of financial assistance for Americans unable to work due to the pandemic. According to the guidance, parents forfeit eligibility for unemployment insurance and virus-related paid leave if they decide to educate their children from home when the child’s school district offered a choice of either online or in-person schooling. The Families First Coronavirus Response Act and the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program provide some benefits to parents unable to work due to child-care responsibilities connected to school closures, but BloombergLaw reports that Thursday’s guidance means parents concerned about the virus who choose the offered remote schooling plan forego those benefits.
In a Wednesday Law360 article, AFL-CIO General Counsel Craig Becker discussed the NLRB’s recent decision in Browning-Ferris Industries of California Inc, arguing it reflects the Board’s ideological transformation and hostility for the Obama-era NLBR’s precedent. Teamsters Local 350 first brought the matter concerning a joint-employer standard to the Obama-era NLRB in 2014, and remained a party as the dispute was appealed to the D.C. Circuit and remanded to the current Board. Becker notes that in ruling against the Teamsters claim, the Board referred to the inadequacy of Obama-era Board’s argument. Becker contends that mistakenly situating the Obama Board as an adverse party betrays the Board’s ideological commitment to reverse Obama-era labor precedents—a commitment Becker also locates in the Board’s refusal to engage the facts and arguments the Teamsters presented.
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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.
November 17
Justices receive petition to resolve FLSA circuit split, vaccine religious discrimination plaintiffs lose ground, and NJ sues Amazon over misclassification.