Top Democrats React to Low-Wage Federal Workers’ Strike

“I work at Quick Pita in the food court of the Ronald Reagan Building. I work nearly 12 hours every day serving lunch to the thousands of people who work in the building. But I am not here to tell you how hard I work. I am here to tell you that my employer does not follow the law,” testified Antonio Vanegas before a hearing of the Congressional Progressive Caucus yesterday. Vanegas is one of 100,0...
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A Budget That Tightens Belts by Emptying Stomachs


San Antonio Food Bank workers Sergio Baiz (right) and Ed Rivas (left) prepare to cook mashed potatoes that will be served to low-income students. Under the House of Representatives' new budget, food assistance will be cut by $20.5 billion over 10 years.   (U.S. Department of Agriculture / Flickr / Creative Commons). A time-honored tactic of conservative lawmakers is to “starve the beast” by defund...
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Farmworkers Fight Wendy’s, the ‘Last Holdout’ on Fair Food


An oversized puppet of the Wendy's mascot, provided by the People's Puppets of Occupy Wall Street, took part in silent street theater to convince the fast food giant to sign onto the Fast Food campaign. (Coalition of Immokalee Workers)   While rain pattered gently on the concrete steps of Manhattan’s Union Square last Saturday, a group of workers were giving the assembled crowd a tour of the sun-s...
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Texas Explosion Could Have Been Worse; Unpaid Interns Denied in Court; Regulator Had Honeywell Stock

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and 27 other government agencies held a press conference on Thursday about their investigation into what sparked the West, Texas explosion. They have ruled out all but three possible causes: a short circuit in the complex's 120-volt electrical system, a golf cart on site or an intentionally set fire. The investigation will continued. Daniel H...
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Senate Standoff Threatens Labor Board Shutdown


Sen. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), the ranking Republican on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, has vowed to block Obama's appointments to the National Labor Relations Board.   Medill DC, Flickr , Creative Commons. WASHINGTON, D.C.–A partisan political standoff in the U.S. Senate threatens to close down the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in August, further eroding worker...
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Labor Department Hits the Road To Push Minimum Wage Hike


Acting Secretary of Labor Seth Harris listens May 14 as fast food worker Laura Bailey describes the financial stresses of raising a daughter while earning $7.80 an hour. Between them is Jonathan Martin, another Baltimore worker who would benefit from a minimum wage increase. (U.S. Department of Labor)   BALTIMORE—With one minimum wage hike proposal after another languishing in Congress, some advoc...
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A More Democratic Foxconn? No One Told the Workers


News of Foxconn's much-trumpeted workplace democracy reforms, announced in February, has yet to reach workers. (kofai/ Flickr /Creative Commons)   With a workforce of more than one million, the electronics giant Foxconn has enough workers in its Chinese factories to fill a small country. So it's fitting that the company has vowed to make its manufacturing kingdom a bit more democratic by encouragi...
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Meet One of the Victims in the Right-Wing War Against the NLRB


In January, an appeals court effectively voided all rulings issued since 2012 by the National Labor Relations Board, which is headquartered in D.C.   DCtim1, Flickr , Creative Commons The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee hearing tomorrow morning about appointments to the National Labor Relations Board may sound like an arcane, inside-the-Beltway event. But it will have very r...
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Sharecropping on Wheels

The port of Savannah, Georgia generates some $14.9 billion in income each year. The goods that flow through it are distributed throughout the South—including to a massive Wal-Mart distribution center in the nearby city of Statesboro. Savannah is now the country's fourth largest container port, and the fastest growing. Traffic at the port went up 11 percent between 2008 and 2012 even as the rest of...
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Senator Calls Out White House for Logjam in Workplace Safety Rulemaking


A 2010 candlelight vigil for those killed in an explosion at the Upper Big Branch coal mine in West Virginia. (Flickr)   As workplace safety and health advocates figure out how to fix workplace safety regulations in the wake of the West, Texas explosion, they agree that one focus should be speeding the passage of new rules. Though the notoriously slow rulemaking process wasn’t a factor in the West...
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Two Wins for Bangladesh Garment Workers, But The Fight Isn’t Over

With a death toll of 1,127, the April 24 collapse of the Rana Plaza factory building in Bangladesh has earned the shameful distinction of being the sixth-worst worst industrial disaster in history . There’s plenty of shame to go around—and not just for the building owner and factory operators who ignored clear warnings of danger. High on the dishonor roll are the multinational apparel companies wh...
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Gov’t Will Pick Up Tab For West, Texas Damage; Amazon, Bikeshare in Hot Seat for Wage Theft


The blaze that followed the April 17, 2013 explosion at the West Texas Fertilizer Company. (Wikimedia Commons)   It appears that the government will be picking up the tab for the damage done by the West Texas Chemical and Fertilizer fire, since Texas does not require insurance for plants of that size. From the Dallas Morning News :  But despite the lack of any legal requirement, experts say, most ...
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As Death Toll in Bangladesh Collapse Climbs Past 1,000, Another Factory Fire Claims 8 Lives


On May 10, 2013, garment worker Reshma was rescued from the rubble, 17 days after the collapse of a Bangladeshi factory. But more than 1,000 workers were not so lucky. (STRDEL/AFP/Getty Images)   Bodies continue to pile up at Rana Plaza, once a powerhouse of Bangladesh’s garment industry, where more than 1,000 corpses have been unearthed since a factory collapse two weeks ago (and today, another s...
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In Wake of West, Texas Explosion, Safety Advocates Recommend Harsher Fines


On average, 13 U.S. workers die a day in workplace accidents, as in this OSHA illustration of grain entrapment. (Wikimedia Commons)   “My happiness was taken away in a matter of seconds,” says Adrianna Martinez of the death of her husband, Orestes Martinez, in a workplace safety accident four years ago. “My family and I are broken.  Losing my husband, my best friend, my love has left an empty spac...
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Columbia College Chicago’s Adjunct Faculty Poised to Strike


Members of Columbia College Chicago's Part-time Faculty Association and their supporters rallied in December 2012, calling for a fair contract. (Photo via P-fac )   Unionized adjunct faculty at Columbia College Chicago appear poised to go on strike for the first time, with union president Diana Vallera telling In These Times that “the College has left only one path for part time faculty and that i...
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