Labor News & Commentary March 4, 2024 a bill that repeals mandatory lunch and rest breaks
https://onlabor.org/march-4-2024/
By Elyse Weissberger
In todays News and Commentary, Dartmouth University files a motion to stay the mens basketball teams unionization election scheduled for tomorrow, Kentuckys House of Representatives will consider a bill that repeals mandatory lunch and rest breaks, and Georgias State Senate passes a bill requiring secret-ballot elections for companies that accept state incentives.
A month ago, Sunah reported on the NLRBs ruling that players on the Dartmouth mens basketball team are employees within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, and are therefore eligible to unionize. The university has pushed back with a full court press, immediately appealing the ruling and hiring a big-time legal team including the Trump administrations former NLRB chairman, Philip Miscimarra. As Jacqueline reported, the Board agreed to move the appeal deadline, meaning the players were due to cast their votes tomorrow. Last week, the university filed a motion to stay the election and requested to expedite its appeal. The university argues that allowing the athletes to unionize does not advance the purposes of the act and flies in the face of a 2014 Board decision, Northwestern University. If the election moves forward, the Dartmouth basketball players will be the first collegiate athletes to have their votes counted in a representation election. If the union wins, the college will have to deliberately refuse to bargain with the new union in order to get direct court review of the players employment classification.
Kentucky is considering yet another bill that rolls back labor laws and protections. Kentucky House Bill 500 would repeal required lunch and rest breaks, eliminate time-and-a-half overtime pay for working 7 consecutive days, and decrease the statute of limitations for bringing employment lawsuits from five years to three. The bill passed the states House of Representatives Small Business and Information Technology Committee in a 9-4 vote, and moves on now to the full chamber. Committee chair, Phillip Pratt, a Republican representative and business owner sponsored this bill, along with HB 255 weakening child labor laws (see Holdens coverage for more). If passed, HB 500 would require employers to pay workers while they are eating instead of giving a mandatory lunch break for every three to five hours of work completed as current state legislation requires. Lunch breaks are not required by federal labor law. Opponents of the bill say the change will decrease workplace safety and increase worker burnout.
FULL story at link above.