Labor News & Commentary December 1, 2023 Starbucks violated labor law by firing two workers and engaging in anti-union
https://onlabor.org/december-1-2023/
By Julio Colby
Julio Colby is a student at Harvard Law School.
In Todays News & Commentary: Emory University Ph.D. student workers overwhelmingly vote to unionize; the Senate fails to advance Bidens ETA pick; and Starbucks violated labor law by firing two workers and engaging in anti-union practices at a Portland café.
On Wednesday, Emory Universitys Ph.D. student workers voted overwhelmingly to unionize with Workers United. EmoryUnite!, as the union calls itself, began as a voluntary-join union more than five years ago. Now, graduate student workers voted 909 to 73 to select the union as their official bargaining representative. The unions objectives include securing raises aligned with the cost of living in Atlanta, improved health insurance coverage, addressing graduate housing costs, obtaining vision insurance, and addressing advisor-related concerns. The win makes Emory the second recognized graduate student-worker union at a private university in the South, following the Duke Graduate Students Unions earlier success, and could set a precedent for further unionization efforts in a low-union-density region. The development is part of a broader trend of increased graduate student organizing nationwide, with recent unionization victories at universities like Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, Yale, Boston University, Stanford, the University of Southern California, and Dartmouth College.
On Wednesday, the Senate failed to advance the nomination of José Javier Rodríguez to lead the Employment and Training Administration (ETA), the Department of Labors largest subagency. Rodríguezs nomination, pending since July 2021, faced a 44-51 vote in a procedural cloture, preventing a final confirmation vote. President Biden selected Rodríguez to oversee the ETA, which controls three-quarters of the DOLs total appropriations. Democrat Senators Joe Manchin and Bob Menendez voted against Rodriguez, and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer switched his vote to no to bring Rodríguez up for another vote in the future. Senator Manchin expressed concerns about Rodríguezs political activism and lack of experience. As a Florida state senator, Rodriguez proposed an increase in unemployment benefits and extending aid to gig workers, and his comments on the need to reform and expand the unemployment insurance system have faced criticism from Republicans. The stalled nomination raises the possibility of President Biden nominating a new candidate to lead the ETA, a crucial subagency responsible for the nations workforce development system and the federal-state unemployment insurance system.
FULL story at link above.