May 13 In today’s News and Commentary, Trump appeals a court-ordered pause on mass layoffs, the Tenth Circuit sidesteps a ruling on the Board’s remedial powers, and an industry group targets Biden-era NLRB decisions. The Trump administration is asking the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to pause a temporary order blocking the administration from continuing […]
May 12 NJ Transit engineers threaten strike; a court halts Trump's firings; and the pope voices support for workers.
May 9 Philadelphia City Council unanimously passes the POWER Act; thousands of federal worker layoffs at the Department of Interior expected; the University of Oregon student workers union reach a tentative agreement, ending 10-day strike
May 8 Court upholds DOL farmworker protections; Fifth Circuit rejects Amazon appeal; NJTransit navigates negotiations and potential strike.
May 7 U.S. Department of Labor announces termination of mental health and child care benefits for its employees; SEIU pursues challenge of NLRB's 2020 joint employer rule in the D.C. Circuit; Columbia University lays off 180 researchers
May 6 HHS canceled a scheduled bargaining session with the FDA's largest workers union; members of 1199SEIU voted out longtime union president George Gresham in rare leadership upset.
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 Future of Judicial Deference to the NLRB It has been nearly ten months since the Supreme Court’s ruling in Loper Bright Enterprise v. Raimondo displaced Chevron’s longstanding injunction that courts must defer to an agency’s “reasonable” interpretation of a statute Congress empowered it to administer — a bedrock precept of administrative law — with the directive to instead exercise “independent judgment in deciding whether an agency has […]
Maybe Disclosure Doesn’t Work I used to think that disclosure laws had the potential to change corporate behavior. The idea is that if businesses have to publicly disclose what they are up to, then they will be shamed into changing their conduct. The problem is that much like the current President, corporate leaders seem increasingly immune from any sense of shame. […]
Updates from the Legal Struggle Against Prison Labor “My three-year-old son thinks I’m a firefighter, which I like to think I am, too.” Joseph Sevilla, told reporters during the Los Angeles wildfires. Sevilla is a firefighter, but he also is incarcerated. He wears an orange uniform on the job and earns just $5.80 to $10.24 for an entire 24-hour shift. Non-incarcerated firefighters, conversely, earn $42.36 per hour. California deployed over 1,000 […]
Career and Technical Education at a Crossroads: Opportunity or Exploitation? A bachelor’s degree is the most reliable pathway into the middle class. Over a lifetime, college-educated workers typically earn $1.2 million more than those with only a high school diploma. Yet faith in higher education is faltering while student debt has skyrocketed to a record $1.7 trillion. This crisis of confidence in higher education has fueled bipartisan interest in career and […]
Farmworker Access Rights Under Threat in Colorado In 2008, Alfredo Conovilca traveled to Colorado to herd sheep on an H-2A visa. On paper, it looked promising: the employer would cover everything from transportation to housing and food. But Conovilca soon discovered there were hidden costs. When he fell ill with back pain—precipitated by kidney issues resulting from insufficient access to water—his employer refused to take him to […]
Daily News & Commentary
Start your day with our roundup of the latest labor developments. See all
May 13
In today’s News and Commentary, Trump appeals a court-ordered pause on mass layoffs, the Tenth Circuit sidesteps a ruling on the Board’s remedial powers, and an industry group targets Biden-era NLRB decisions. The Trump administration is asking the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to pause a temporary order blocking the administration from continuing […]
May 12
NJ Transit engineers threaten strike; a court halts Trump's firings; and the pope voices support for workers.
May 9
Philadelphia City Council unanimously passes the POWER Act; thousands of federal worker layoffs at the Department of Interior expected; the University of Oregon student workers union reach a tentative agreement, ending 10-day strike
May 8
Court upholds DOL farmworker protections; Fifth Circuit rejects Amazon appeal; NJTransit navigates negotiations and potential strike.
May 7
U.S. Department of Labor announces termination of mental health and child care benefits for its employees; SEIU pursues challenge of NLRB's 2020 joint employer rule in the D.C. Circuit; Columbia University lays off 180 researchers
May 6
HHS canceled a scheduled bargaining session with the FDA's largest workers union; members of 1199SEIU voted out longtime union president George Gresham in rare leadership upset.