The president of UAW Local 42 at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga announced planned meetings with company executives yesterday. Politico reports that this would be the “first time the union has conferred formally with executives” under the auto manufacturer’s work councils. A recent audit revealed that at least 45 percent of plant workers supported Local 42. The union had previously lost an election earlier this year. Union president, Michael Cantrell, announced that it would hold a bargaining committee election on Sunday.
The House of Representatives passed H.R. 30 “Save American Workers Act of 2015” yesterday, which would repeal the current 30-hour definition of “full-time employment” under the Affordable Care Act. If signed by the president, the bill would restore the traditional 40-hour workweek. Unions have issued strong statements in support of the bill. The White House, however, opposes the bipartisan bill and argues that there is “no evidence” that the current definition fuels part-time work.
Although health insurance premiums have not risen as much since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, workers continue to struggle with paying health care expenses due to stagnant wages. The effect is felt most strongly amongst workers in the South where median income tends to be below the national average. From 2003 to 2013, insurance premiums rose faster than median incomes for workers in all states. In 2003, average annual premiums represented at least 20 percent of the median income in only two states. Today, that number is 37 states.
In international news, Poland announced that it would close four coal mines in an attempt to shield Kompania Weglowa, Europe’s largest coal producer, from bankruptcy. Labor unions are adamantly opposing the closures. On Thursday, hundreds of workers remained underground after their shifts in protest. The Polish government wants other companies to preserve the “most promising coal mines” and plans to spend $630 million on severance packages in the next two years. Kompania Weglowa has suffered financially due to the falling price of oil worldwide, which has made imports cheaper than domestically extracted coal. The company has about 49,000 employees.
According to The New York Times, falling prices in the eurozone have economists worried about the pace of economic recovery. A recent report noted that consumer prices fell 0.2 percent in December compared to the same time a year earlier, which represented “the first time they have turned negative since the dark days of the global financial crisis in 2009.” Economists predict that consumers will delay purchases in hope of a better deal later and businesses will avoid making products if prices continue to fall. Across Europe, Germany, the bloc’s biggest economy, saw its unemployment rate decline from 6.5 percent to 6.4 percent in December. However, in France and Italy, the second and third largest economies in the bloc respectively, unemployment rates increased. About 25 percent of the population in both Greece and Spain remain unemployed.
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May 18
In today’s news and commentary, the DC Circuit lifts a preliminary injunction on Trump’s collective bargaining ban for federal workers; HHS, DOL and Treasury pause a 2024 mental health parity regulation; and NJ Transit workers continue into the third day of a historic strike. In a 2-1 decision issued on Friday, the D.C. Circuit overturned […]
May 16
Supreme Court hears a case about universal injunctions; Champion of workers' rights announces run for Colorado Attorney General; Sesame Street is officially union!
May 15
Unions in Colorado urge Governor Polis to sign Senate Bill 5; more than 1200 Starbucks workers go on strike; and IATSE calls on President Trump to reinstate Shira Perlmutter.
May 14
District court upholds NLRB's constitutionality, NY budget caps damage awards, NMB or NLRB jurisdiction for SpaceX?
May 13
In today’s News and Commentary, Trump appeals a court-ordered pause on mass layoffs, the Tenth Circuit sidesteps a ruling on the Board’s remedial powers, and an industry group targets Biden-era NLRB decisions. The Trump administration is asking the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to pause a temporary order blocking the administration from continuing […]
May 12
NJ Transit engineers threaten strike; a court halts Trump's firings; and the pope voices support for workers.