
Esther Ritchin is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s news and commentary, the NLRB files an injunction against the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Cal/OSHA heat enforcement rates have fallen, and Walgreens pharmacy workers hope to unionize.
On Wednesday, August 14, the National Labor Relations Board filed an injunction against the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, asking a judge to compel the newspaper to reimburse their employees for healthcare costs incurred as a result of the paper’s unilateral changes to employee healthcare, and bring the paper back to the bargaining table for good faith negotiations. This order comes after a nearly two-year strike by a group of employees.
The Los Angeles Times and Capital & Main, found that California was cutting back on enforcement of its heat safety standards, even as temperatures continue to rise. California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) is responsible for enforcing California’s outdoor heat-illness law, which requires protections including shaded break areas and cool drinking water. The investigation conducted by LA Times and Capital & Main found that from 2017 to 2023, Cal/OSHA conducted 30% fewer field investigations and issued 40% fewer violations to employers. The drop in numbers does not reflect improved compliance by employers, according to advocates such as California Rural Legal Assistance and interviews with more than 40 farmworkers in California.
Walgreens pharmacists and technicians at a store in Washington are hoping to be the first Walgreens employees to join the Pharmacy Guild, a union that formed last year in the wake of walkouts throughout the industry. CVS employees at a store in Las Vegas became the first to join the union last year, followed by CVS employees at other stores. The Washington Walgreen workers are hoping for more reasonable workloads and adequate staffing.
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June 5
Nail technicians challenge California classification; oral arguments in challenge to LGBTQ hiring protections; judge blocks Job Corps shutdown.
June 4
Federal agencies violate federal court order pausing mass layoffs; Walmart terminates some jobs in Florida following Supreme Court rulings on the legal status of migrants; and LA firefighters receive a $9.5 million settlement for failure to pay firefighters during shift changes.
June 3
Federal judge blocks Trump's attack on TSA collective bargaining rights; NLRB argues that Grindr's Return-to-Office policy was union busting; International Trade Union Confederation report highlights global decline in workers' rights.
June 2
Proposed budgets for DOL and NLRB show cuts on the horizon; Oregon law requiring LPAs in cannabis dispensaries struck down.
June 1
In today’s news and commentary, the Ninth Circuit upholds a preliminary injunction against the Trump Administration, a federal judge vacates parts of the EEOC’s pregnancy accommodation rules, and video game workers reach a tentative agreement with Microsoft. In a 2-1 decision issued on Friday, the Ninth Circuit upheld a preliminary injunction against the Trump Administration […]
May 30
Trump's tariffs temporarily reinstated after brief nationwide injunction; Louisiana Bill targets payroll deduction of union dues; Colorado Supreme Court to consider a self-defense exception to at-will employment