Hannah Belitz is a student at Harvard Law School.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Democrats and unions are at odds over a $1 trillion pension gap. As a result of the pension gap, a number of Democratic politicians “are increasingly supporting more aggressive overhauls of government pensions.” Since 2009, 25 of 34 states with Democratic governors have scaled back retirement benefits for public workers. Still, Republican governors have often pursued more drastic measures like completely eliminating traditional pensions and replacing them with 401(k)-like plans similar to those in the private sector. Public-sector unions, on their part, have responded by filing lawsuits to block the pension cuts, and have prevailed in several states.
At the Washington Post, Lydia DePillis announces seven themes to watch in the working world in 2016: continued wage increases (or lack thereof), worker-friendly policymaking, the success of the TPP, the fate of public sector unions in Friedrichs, growth in the labor movement, lawsuits over the status of employees in the gig economy, and the NLRB’s suit against McDonalds.
The New York Times reports on a Canadian town that rallied to save a tomato plant from shutting down. In 2013, a group of investors — 3G Capital and Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffet’s company — bought Heinz and announced plans to close the plant and issued layoff notices to its 740 workers. Thanks in part to a 54-year-old Canadian regulation that bans using tomato paste to make tomato juice and requires the use of fresh tomatoes, locals were able to convince Heinz to keep the plant in operation.
Daily News & Commentary
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July 15
U.S. labor productivity climbs at its fastest pace in decades; a federal judge grants a preliminary injunction to anti-abortion groups challenging Michigan’s civil rights law; and Jackson, Mississippi’s bus workers walk off the job.
July 14
DOJ opens investigation of UAW president; LIUNA protests Pfizer building collapse; national park workers unionize
July 13
New York Times files retaliation suit against the EEOC; US government pushes back TPS designation termination for Haiti; federal judge grants preliminary injunction to federal workers seeking reasonable telework accommodations.
July 12
Postal workers demand investigation into Atlanta distribution center conditions following deaths; University of Chicago Press Workers vote to unionize.
July 10
Brigham and Women’s Hospital locks out 4,000 nurses after one-day strike; appeal filed challenging agency-shop agreements.
July 9
The Second Circuit declines to vacate an arbitration award over a nursing union dispute; federal workers sue the Department of Defense for termination of union contracts; New York City announces settlement with companies for violating New York work laws.