
Travis Lavenski is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s news & commentary, Southern states enact new laws to protect gig companies, the UK rail strike may not be over yet, and Starbucks Workers United creates a national newsletter.
State legislatures in Alabama and Georgia have weighed in on the gig economy debate, siding with companies such as Uber and Lyft, Bloomberg reports. In Alabama and Georgia, new laws went into effect this month stating that app-based gig economy workers are independent contractors, not employees. Florida also has a new law that went into effect earlier this month, allowing companies to deliver assistance and benefits during state of emergencies without misclassifying their workers. Gig companies have aggressively lobbied States to allow them to classify their workers as independent contractors, thus denying them basic minimum wage and other employment law protections. Gig companies have sought to influence national politics as well, forming the Flex lobbying group earlier this year to push back against the PRO Act.
Across the pond, the largest rail strike in 30 years in the United Kingdom is on pause, but further action could be coming. On June 21st of this year, nearly 40,000 rail staff staged a walkout over stagnant wages, worsening job conditions, and proposed job cuts by the public rail operators. Similar walkouts, also led by the RMT Union, occurred on June 23rd and June 25th, and resulted in a nearly $121 million blow to the UK’s economy. Strike actions are currently on pause as the RMT Union is negotiating and considering its options, but further escalation could occur if no agreement is made. RMT General Secretary Mick Lynch has made headlines during this dispute for his clear and powerful articulation of the working class struggle, calling the strike the “fight of our lifetime and of our generation.” Despite ardent opposition from the Conservative Government, public opinion polls demonstrate increasing public support for the rail workers.
Starbucks Workers United announced on Twitter the release of a new national newsletter. The union, who has organized over 5,000 Starbucks workers at nearly 190 stores since last December, is slated to drop the first issue today, with new issues coming out on a biweekly basis. The newsletter is created by Starbucks workers and will discuss topics such as campaign updates, store spotlights, and more. The link to sign up for the newsletter is here.
Daily News & Commentary
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August 11
Updates on two-step FLSA certification, Mamdani's $30 minimum wage proposal, dangers of "bossware."
August 10
NLRB Acting GC issues new guidance on ULPs, Trump EO on alternative assets in401(k)s, and a vetoed Wisconsin bill on rideshare driver status
August 8
DHS asks Supreme Court to lift racial-profiling ban; University of California's policy against hiring undocumented students found to violate state law; and UC Berkeley launches database about collective bargaining and workplace technology.
August 7
VA terminates most union contracts; attempts to invalidate Michigan’s laws granting home care workers union rights; a district judge dismisses grocery chain’s lawsuit against UFCW
August 5
In today’s news and commentary, a pension fund wins at the Eleventh Circuit, casino unionization in Las Vegas, and DOL’s work-from-home policy changes. A pension fund for unionized retail and grocery workers won an Eleventh Circuit appeal against Perfection Bakeries, which claimed it was overcharged nearly $2 million in federal withdrawal liability. The bakery argued the […]
August 4
Trump fires head of BLS; Boeing workers authorize strike.