
Greg Volynsky is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s News & Commentary, Starbucks workers in Chelsea file petition for decertification vote, federal jury orders largest settlement ever under the Fair Labor Standards Act, and employees at an architecture firm file petition to unionize.
On Thursday, workers at the Starbucks Reserve Roastery in Chelsea, New York, filed a petition to hold a vote to decertify their union. This move comes a little over a year after the employees at this store became the first Starbucks workers in NYC to unionize. The Chelsea Roastery Starbucks also gained coverage during a seven-week strike last year. The anti-union effort is aided by the pro-bono representation of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation (NRTW), the group which successfully argued the 2018 Janus decision, and comes just days after workers at two other Starbucks stores in Rochester and Buffalo, New York, also submitted decertification petitions.
On Wednesday, a federal jury ordered East Penn Manufacturing Co., one of the largest battery manufacturers globally, to pay over $22 million in back wages to its employees. The court found the company guilty of not paying workers for the time required to change into protective clothing and shower; the verdict marks the largest settlement ever under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The lawsuit was filed by the U.S. Department of Labor in 2018, alleging that the company typically paid workers only for their scheduled eight-hour shifts, not accounting for the time employees spent on essential safety measures.
On Tuesday, employees at Snøhetta, an international design firm, filed a petition to unionize under the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. The firm has approximately 90 employees in New York and San Francisco. If they succeed, Snøhetta will be only the second private architecture firm in the U.S. to have a union in almost a hundred years. The petition comes a year and a half after employees at SHoP Architects, a prominent firm with about 135 employees, filed a petition to unionize. The petition was withdrawn following a “powerful anti-union campaign.” While the unionization effort failed, it sparked a wave of similar efforts. In September 2022, Bernheimer Architecture, a 22-person Brooklyn-based firm, unionized. While the architecture industry is known for long hours and low pay, the motivation for unionizing at Snøhetta is not to improve poor working conditions, but to ensure the continuity of current better-than-industry-standard conditions.
Daily News & Commentary
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October 15
An interview with former NLRB chairman; Supreme Court denies cert in Southern California hotel case
October 14
Census Bureau layoffs, Amazon holiday hiring, and the final settlement in a meat producer wage-fixing lawsuit.
October 13
Texas hotel workers ratify a contract; Pope Leo visits labor leaders; Kaiser lays off over two hundred workers.
October 12
The Trump Administration fires thousands of federal workers; AFGE files a supplemental motion to pause the Administration’s mass firings; Democratic legislators harden their resolve during the government shutdown.
October 10
California bans algorithmic price-fixing; New York City Council passes pay transparency bills; and FEMA questions staff who signed a whistleblowing letter.
October 9
Equity and the Broadway League resume talks amid a looming strike; federal judge lets alcoholism ADA suit proceed; Philadelphia agrees to pay $40,000 to resolve a First Amendment retaliation case.