
Jason Vazquez is a staff attorney at the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. He graduated from Harvard Law School in 2023. His writing on this blog reflects his personal views and should not be attributed to the IBT.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of Labor announced a $1.5 million funding program aimed at ensuring that women workers are enabled to exercise their rights at work. The initiative, administered by the Department’s Women’s Bureau, aspires to help women “understand and exercise their rights and benefits in the workplace” by “develop[ing] partnerships with community-based organizations and other non-profits to conduct outreach to women workers.” According to the Women’s Bureau Director, the initiative was precipitated by the gender inequities exposed by the pandemic. Indeed, the economic dislocation associated with COVID-19 has affected women with special force, given that they remain disproportionately represented in low-wage industries, continue to face a high incidence of workplace discrimination, and earn substantially less than their male counterparts.
The New York Times published an article yesterday seeking to expose “the human cost of Amazon’s employment machine.” The report, based on interviews with nearly 200 current and former Amazon warehouse employees, details the firm’s obsession with productivity and efficiency, and its dystopian reliance on robotic, metric, and algorithmic systems to monitor and track nearly every aspect of employees’ workdays. The firm contends that Amazon founder Jeff Bezos views a stable workforce as a threat and thus specifically designed a business model aimed at dissuading employees from remaining with the firm for long. In recent years, for example, Amazon has been hiring hundreds of thousands of new employees, but many of them have abandoned the firm’s grueling warehouses nearly as fast as their replacements are being hired. In fact, Amazon drains labor markets with such intensity that some of its executives are reportedly harboring anxieties that there won’t be enough workers in some regions of the country to sustain the firm’s sprawling operations.
In more uplifting news, workers in disparate industries across the country continue their post-pandemic efforts to organize and join labor unions. Hundreds of staffers at Oxford University Press’ NYC office revealed this morning that they have joined the NewsGuild. Additionally, workers at software firm Mapbox disclosed yesterday that nearly two-thirds of the company’s U.S. employees have signed cards to join the CWA. Lastly, staff at the country’s first Black-owned distillery, situated in Minneapolis, formed a union on Monday, which management voluntarily recognized.
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May 25
United Airlines flight attendants reach tentative agreement; Whole Foods workers secure union certification; One Big Beautiful Bill Act cuts $1.1 trillion
May 23
United Steelworkers union speaks out against proposed steel merger; Goodwin Procter turns over diversity data; Anthropic AI's fair use claim over authors' creative work
May 22
BLS releases statistics on foreign-born workers; courts vacate EEOC protections; SCOTUS considers takings case.
May 21
Supreme Court grants the Trump Administration the ability to end Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelan immigrants; a federal judge permits airline customer service agents to pursue litigation rather than arbitration in a wage dispute; and NLRB prosecutors limit when they seek consequential remedies for unfair labor practices.
May 19
Schedule F comment period ends this week; Wilcox's reinstatement case is back before D.C. Circuit; NLRB removal protection case runs into jurisdictional problem; NJ locomotive strike ends in success.
May 18
In today’s news and commentary, the DC Circuit lifts a preliminary injunction on Trump’s collective bargaining ban for federal workers; HHS, DOL and Treasury pause a 2024 mental health parity regulation; and NJ Transit workers continue into the third day of a historic strike. In a 2-1 decision issued on Friday, the D.C. Circuit overturned […]