Jason Vazquez is a staff attorney at the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. He graduated from Harvard Law School in 2023. His writing on this blog reflects his personal views and should not be attributed to the Teamsters.
A group of employees attempting to organize the first union at an Apple retail store filed an unfair labor practice charge on Tuesday alleging that the company conducted captive audience meetings. The charge is interesting in that it could serve as a vehicle to challenge the NLRB caselaw blessing such meetings, which GC Abruzzo recently characterized as a “license to coerce” and urged the Board to proscribe. Last month this Atlanta location became the first Apple shop to petition for a union election, which prompted several others to do the same in recent weeks.
On Tuesday the AFA-CWA offered its “full support” to the proposed merger between Spirit Airlines and Frontier Airlines, two of the most dominant ultra low-cost carriers. The announcement significantly heightens the possibility that the multibillion-dollar deal will be pushed through, with the potential to reshape the industry. In exchange for its endorsement, the union — which represents flight attendants at both carriers — extracted several concessions aiming to protect its members: primarily, that the merger will not be finalized until a joint collective bargaining agreement has been ratified, will not result in any furloughs, and will not disturb seniority. The merger faces significant political headwinds even with the influential union’s support, as an expanding and increasingly bipartisan group of lawmakers signals skepticism and the FTC, recently displaying a renewed commitment to antitrust enforcement, begins to examine its anticompetitive effects.
In labor law enforcement news, Angie Cowan Hamada, an attorney with the Chicago-based labor-side firm Allison, Slutsky, & Kennedy, was appointed RD of Region 13. Ms. Cowan Hamada, “a brilliant labor lawyer who has dedicated her career to protecting workers’ rights,” in the words of General Counsel Abruzzo, worked for a union before law school, was a Peggy Browning Fellow in law school, and has devoted her practice almost exclusively to representing unions and workers.
Daily News & Commentary
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June 9
SoFi Stadium workers authorize a strike ahead of the World Cup; the NLRB finds Starbucks violated labor law; Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee is struck down.
June 8
BLS releases May jobs reports; US Trade Representative proposes new tariffs.
June 7
SAG-AFTRA members ratify a four-year CBA and the International Trade Union Confederation releases its 2026 Global Rights Index.
June 4
Third Circuit tosses DOL’s $35.8 million healthcare wage award; Trump’s Republican NLRB nominee gets Senate hearing; Harvard graduate students end strike.
June 3
JOLTS data shows mixed labor market as personal income declines; New York Fed research links remote work to rising youth unemployment; Virginia Governor Spanberger signs sweeping employment reform package.
June 2
Illinois passes rideshare driver unionization bill; DOL issues new union financial reporting rule; unions push back against AI data center regulations.