Hannah Belitz is a student at Harvard Law School.
Now that the UAW has negotiated a contract with General Motors, leaders are pushing members to vote yes. Voting began late last week, and although workers at four assembly plants and a number of component plants approved the agreement, workers at two other assembly plants and one transmission plant rejected it. Voting ends on Saturday, and while the Wall Street Journal reports that the possibility remains open that workers will reject this agreement, Politico suggests that workers are likely to approve the deal.
According to the New York Times, Boeing has reached a settlement agreement of $57 million in a class-action lawsuit challenging the retirement plans it offers workers. The lawsuit accused Boeing of “charging excessive fees and choosing higher-cost investment offerings for workers and retirees who participate in its 401(k) retirement plan,” and was one of a series of class-action suits brought by a St. Louis lawyer pushing for more accountability in corporate retirement plans. Eight other companies have also settled, including Ameriprise Financial, Cigna, and Kraft Foods, for a combined settlement amount of $271.5 million.
At the Washington Post, Lydia DePillis offers a primer on the recently released Trans-Pacific Partnership. You can view the text of the agreement here, but as DePillis suggests, you should read her “TPP explainer first.”
Other TPP news includes a side agreement that obliges Vietnam to pass legislation to legalize independent unions, permit them to strike, and allow foreign labor organizations like the A.F.L.-C.I.O to offer them help. The New York Times notes that the agreement could provide workers with more bargaining power, but its impact will “depend on how Vietnam carries out the agreement.” Vietnam’s Constitution includes the right of workers to strike and engage in organized protests, but until now Vietnam had passed few laws to codify and protect those rights. While a former top official praised the agreement as “a very positive step for Vietnam,” it remains to be seen to what degree the agreement will strengthen Vietnamese labor unions.
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March 11
The partial government shutdown results in TSA agents losing their first full paycheck; the Fifth Circuit upholds the certification of a class of former United Airline workers who were placed on unpaid leave for declining to receive the COVID-19 vaccine for religious reasons during the pandemic; and an academic group files a lawsuit against the State Department over a policy that revokes and denies visas to noncitizens for their work in fact-checking and content moderation.
March 10
Court rules Kari Lake unlawfully led USAGM, voiding mass layoffs; Florida Senate passes bill tightening union recertification rules; Fifth Circuit revives whistleblower suit against Lockheed Martin.
March 9
6th Circuit rejects Cemex, Board may overrule precedents with two members.
March 8
In today’s news and commentary, a weak jobs report, the NIH decides it will no longer recognize a research fellows’ union, and WNBA contract talks continue to stall as season approaches. On Friday, the Labor Department reported that employers cut 92,000 jobs in February while the unemployment rate rose slightly to 4.4 percent. A loss […]
March 6
The Harvard Graduate Students Union announces a strike authorization vote.
March 5
Colorado judge grants AFSCME’s motion to intervene to defend Colorado’s county employee collective bargaining law; Arizona proposes constitutional amendment to ban teachers unions’ use public resources; NLRB unlikely to use rulemaking to overturn precedent.