Bloomberg Business reports that South Korean Employment and Labor Minister Lee Ki Kweon said in an interview that large companies should hire more permanent workers and boost pay to subcontractors. One-third of South Korea’s workforce is employed on temporary contracts, and these contract workers earn an average 56 percent of what regular, full-time employees earn.
On Sunday, German labor union Verdi called for a strike at Deutsche Bank’s retail unit Postbank to enforce job security and higher wages. Verdi stated that the union expects “an offer that extends job guarantees [until 2020 from the end of last year] and [5%] higher wages.” The strikes will take place at various locations throughout Germany on Monday. Verdi’s strike comes at a time when Deutsche Bank is working on a strategy shift that may include selling or “floating” Postbank.
The Los Angeles Times writes that California longshoremen’s unions have retained influence in an era where unions are pushed to the side in favor of globalization and automation. About half of West Coast union longshoremen make more than $100,000 a year, and over half of foremen and managers earn more than $200,000 each year. All longshoremen union employees get free healthcare. This advantageous position, in stark contrast to many other shipping industry unions, is largely due to collective bargaining and contract deals in the 1930s and 1960s.
However, not everything in California’s shipping industry is smooth sailing. The Wall Street Journal reports that, in light of the massive port worker slowdown that has all but shut down West Coast shipping, managers have had to resort to creative measures to keep cargo from piling up. Some have tried making time slots for short-haul truck drivers, others have eschewed moving containers around to get specific cargo and instead just giving each truck driver the first cargo off the top of the stack. Still others have turned to an Uber-like app called Cargomatic to direct short-haul truck drivers. Even since a tentative contract was reached Feb. 20, experts estimate it could be almost six months before shipping returns to normal, and that these delays could cost retailers billions of dollars this year.
Daily News & Commentary
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March 6
A federal judge hears Wilcox's challenge to her NLRB removal and the FTC announces a "Joint Labor Task Force."
March 5
In today’s news and commentary, lots of headlines for the United Auto Workers as the union comes out in support of tariffs, files for an election at a Volkswagen distribution center in New Jersey, and continues to bargain a first contract at the Chattanooga VW plant they organized last spring. The UAW released a statement […]
March 4
In today’s news and commentary, the Tennessee Drivers Union allegedly faces retaliation for organizing, major hospital groups are hit with a wage suppression lawsuit, and updates from Capitol Hill. The Tennessee Drivers Union announced on social media that its members are facing retaliation from Uber and Lyft for their rideshare organizing activities. Specifically, 34 members […]
March 3
Democrats invite fired federal workers to Trump’s address to a joint session; the NLRB’s acting general counsel announces agency focus on boosting settlements; the United Federation of Teachers may face a regime change
March 2
Judge partially blocks federal worker firings; Trump Administration wants data on federal worker unions; AFT fights Musk by pressuring Tesla.
February 28
In today’s news and commentary, a Senate committee advances Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s nomination and UAW reaches a tentative agreement with Rolls-Royce. On Thursday, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions voted to advance the nomination of Lori Chavez-DeRemer for Secretary of Labor, 14-9. At the Senate hearing, Senator Bernie Sanders, the committee’s ranking member, […]