February 3 New Jersey advances a temp worker rights bill; Johns Hopkins doctoral students join a wave of unionized graduate students; canvassers systematically misrepresented a petition for a veto referendum on the California fast food workers bill; and strikes continue in the UK
February 2 Starbucks made illegal threats during a union election; an Illinois bill would paid time off; and the UK cost of living strike continues.
January 31 Apple faces ULP charge; public school teachers strike in Massachusetts; UAW runoff voting begins; a Jacobin article discusses a new app that could facilitate union organizing
January 30 [email protected] — Illinois’s highest court considers whether federal collective bargaining law preempts BIPA; the EEOC publishes a new plan to enforce nondiscrimination laws against AI hiring technology; and working professionals discover the wonders — and dangers — of ChatGPT.
January 29 Republican states challenge DOL's ESG rule, Ninth Circuit agrees to hear lawsuit challenging private prison labor
The New Republic Starbucks Workers Are Unionizing. Their Bosses Are Refusing to Bargain. Prof. Block on how employers' refusal to bargain harms the labor movement
Talking Points Memo Chipotle Borrows From Starbucks’ Playbook As Workers Push To Unionize Prof. Sachs on how though "policies in Washington have made it very difficult for workers to organize; at the moment, workers are defying those fierce headwinds."
SHRM A Beneficial Union Prof. Sachs on how employers can benefit from unions, explaining how unions "open up a new line of communication between management and workers" and how voluntary recognition "can be faster and less acrimonious" than using the NLRB process
Bloomberg Apple to Withhold Latest Employee Perks From Unionized Store Prof. Sachs explains why employers like Apple and Starbucks are wrong when they say they can't offer union workers the same perks that they're extending to nonunion employees.
The American Prospect Laws That Create Countervailing Power A roundtable discussion with Benjamin Sachs, Kate Andrias, Steve Kest, and Robert Kuttner.
A Change that Could Help the NLRB Crack Down on Employers that Discriminate Against Unions Cheers to General Counsel (GC) Jennifer Abruzzo for her current efforts to emphasize use of Section 10(j), the temporary injunction provision in the NLRA that has never been effectively used where it’s been most needed: for enforcement of Section 8(a)(3), the employment discrimination unfair labor practice (ULP) that’s most often violated. Indeed, Section 10(j) has […]
How the Next Big Supreme Court Labor Case Threatens Workers’ Rights Cement-truck drivers went on strike. A lawsuit by their company may pave the way for restricting workers’ rights.
Trapped at Work An explainer on "TRAPs" — the agreements in your employment contract designed to stop you from leaving your job.
Who’s Left Behind by Unpaid Leave Our system of unpaid leave is an international anomaly. It also disproportionately excludes women and minority workers.
From Behind Bars, Incarcerated Workers Are Unionizing, Striking Incarcerated workers are not recognized by the law as employees. Still, they've formed unions and are mobilizing a nationwide strike.
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
February 3
New Jersey advances a temp worker rights bill; Johns Hopkins doctoral students join a wave of unionized graduate students; canvassers systematically misrepresented a petition for a veto referendum on the California fast food workers bill; and strikes continue in the UK
February 2
Starbucks made illegal threats during a union election; an Illinois bill would paid time off; and the UK cost of living strike continues.
February 1
Judge rules Amazon violated labor law and HuffPost workers announce readiness to strike.
January 31
Apple faces ULP charge; public school teachers strike in Massachusetts; UAW runoff voting begins; a Jacobin article discusses a new app that could facilitate union organizing
January 30
[email protected] — Illinois’s highest court considers whether federal collective bargaining law preempts BIPA; the EEOC publishes a new plan to enforce nondiscrimination laws against AI hiring technology; and working professionals discover the wonders — and dangers — of ChatGPT.
January 29
Republican states challenge DOL's ESG rule, Ninth Circuit agrees to hear lawsuit challenging private prison labor