June 25 NLRB orders Amazon to bargain with workers; federal judge blocks ICE agents from making arrests in courthouses.
June 24 NYC primary vies for union support; NLRB ruling tees up Cemex challenge; Sixth Circuit deals blow to NLRB policymaking.
June 23 The Supreme Court declines review of a taxpayer lawsuit against a teacher union's paid leave policy; Congressional Democrats oppose Labor Department's proposed joint employer rule.
June 22 Pro-labor candidate wins DC mayoral primary; Department of Labor secures court order regarding back wages.
June 21 The Bolivian government declares a state of emergency in response to union-led protests, and hotel workers in Philadelphia strike amidst World Cup celebrations.
June 19 The Supreme Court declines to hear a challenge to a Ninth Circuit decision upholding Thryv remedies, and tech workers receive mixed messaging about AI use.
Wired Hundreds of Video Game Workers Join New Union as Trump Attacks Labor Rights Prof. Sachs on challenges to union organizing under the second Trump Administration.
Los Angeles Times Column: How anti-union southern governors may be violating federal law Ben Sachs quoted in a column about the anti-union governors' letter and the fragmentation of labor law; John Fry's post referenced on the question of whether state level card-check bans are preempted by the NLRA.
Fast Company Amazon’s Labor Union is divided but closing in on electing leadership Prof. Sachs on Amazon's use of legal roadblocks to delay negotiations.
Semafor Unions’ picket power now extends to U.S. boardrooms Prof. Block on the influence of labor unions on other playing fields.
Bloomberg Law Boeing Talks Will Test Unions’ Sway as Labor Market Softens Prof. Block on Boeing's labor negotiations with the International Association of Machinists.
The Federal Anti-Trafficking Statute Can Deliver Civil Remedies for U.S. Workers Twenty-five years ago, Congress enacted the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (“TVPRA”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1581 et seq., as a criminal statute prohibiting forced labor, slavery, peonage, or indentured servitude, as well as trafficking persons (i.e., recruiting, transporting, or harboring them) in furtherance thereof. (The TVPRA also criminalizes trafficking persons for the purpose of commercial sex). Since […]
Why Prevailing Wages Matter for Abundance We’ve seen some important post-mortems of the Biden administration’s Investing in America agenda, a massive industrial policy effort aimed at leveraging public and private-sector investments to expand the nation’s manufacturing sector, shore up national security, and create good jobs (often union jobs) open to workers without college degrees. Some saw the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the CHIPS […]
Loyalty Tests A recent D.C. Circuit decision, Oncor Electric Delivery Company LLC v. NLRB, shrinks the protections the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) provides to workers by misreading a Supreme Court opinion regarding statements by workers that disparage their employer’s product. The decision allowed Oncor to fire the lead negotiator for its technician’s union for his testimony before the state […]
Employers Should Choose a Lane Amazon workers at the JFK8 fulfillment center in Staten Island are caught in a labor-law no-man’s land. Amazon has challenged the constitutionality of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in federal court, seeking to block the Board’s remedies. Still, when those same workers sought labor protections under New York’s labor law, Amazon invoked Garmon preemption to block […]
Garmon Is in the Way, but It May Be Here to Stay Is Garmon on its last legs? First came the Supreme Court’s 2023 decision in Glacier Northwest, Inc. v. Teamsters, where five Justices called the labor law preemption doctrine “unusual” while two others invited the Court to reconsider the “strange[] . . . Garmon regime.” Then came Loper Bright, ending Chevron deference. Add in attacks on the NLRB’s constitutionality and a quorum-less Board, and many […]
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June 25
NLRB orders Amazon to bargain with workers; federal judge blocks ICE agents from making arrests in courthouses.
June 24
NYC primary vies for union support; NLRB ruling tees up Cemex challenge; Sixth Circuit deals blow to NLRB policymaking.
June 23
The Supreme Court declines review of a taxpayer lawsuit against a teacher union's paid leave policy; Congressional Democrats oppose Labor Department's proposed joint employer rule.
June 22
Pro-labor candidate wins DC mayoral primary; Department of Labor secures court order regarding back wages.
June 21
The Bolivian government declares a state of emergency in response to union-led protests, and hotel workers in Philadelphia strike amidst World Cup celebrations.
June 19
The Supreme Court declines to hear a challenge to a Ninth Circuit decision upholding Thryv remedies, and tech workers receive mixed messaging about AI use.