Latest, National Steve Wishnia Latest, National Steve Wishnia

Part II: U.S. Supreme Court Poised to ‘Weaken Workers’ Power’

By Steve Wishnia

Editor’s Note: This is part two of a two-part Work-Bites report

If the Supreme Court’s far-right majority wants to rewrite labor law, it can’t simply do it by fiat. Even “if they don’t care about stare decisis,” the general principle is that to overturn an established precedent, they have to establish that it was “egregiously wrongly decided,” explains West Virginia University Law School professor Anne Lofaso, a former National Labor Relations Board attorney.

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Latest, National Joe Maniscalco Latest, National Joe Maniscalco

Musk ‘Waltzed In’ And Fired Everybody - Now What?

By Joe Maniscalco

The Twitter office cleaners billionaire owner Elon Musk marked for termination in both New York and California last month, are part of a group of essential workers who, just a minute ago, were rightly being lauded as pandemic heroes responsible for helping to keep the economy going while many were too afraid to go outside the house.

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Latest, National Joe Maniscalco Latest, National Joe Maniscalco

Still No Union Contract? This’ll Help…

By Joe Maniscalco

Despite the roughly $340 million employers spend each year to crush their unionization efforts, American workers are filing more union petitions than they have at any time since 2016, and they’re winning more than 70 percent of workplace elections. So, how come most still don’t have a signed union contract after more than a year of trying?

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Latest, Commentary, National Joe Maniscalco Latest, Commentary, National Joe Maniscalco

Local Journalists Are Vital – Why Are We So Radically Underpaid?

BY RILEY JAMES

When my daughter was in second grade, she appeared in a school play as a member of the White House Press Corps. She could have tried out for the role of president, or vice president, or Secret Service agent, but she knew the role she wanted, because she wanted to be a journalist just like me, and she got it.

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Commentary, National, Latest Timothy Sheard Commentary, National, Latest Timothy Sheard

A Work Week Pick-Me-Up…

By Timothy Sheard

Editor’s Note: Tim Sheard is the founder of Work-Bites’ publishing partner Hard Ball and Little Heroes Press. We’re happy to share this little vignette of old-time New York City with you. Have a great work week!

My dad was a New York City newspaper reporter in the 1940's and 50's. On most mornings, he and his fellow reporters would clock in at work, and then go to the pub to start drinking.

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National, Commentary, Latest Joe Maniscalco National, Commentary, Latest Joe Maniscalco

Reporter’s Notebook: ‘Workforce’ vs. ‘Labor’ and Far-Right Political Correctness

By Steve Wishnia

Along with multiple vows to investigate the “weaponization” of federal agencies against the peaceful tourists who visited the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, another ritual of the Republicans taking control of the House this month was once again changing the name of the Committee on Education and Labor to the Committee on Education and the Workforce.

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Latest, National Joe Maniscalco Latest, National Joe Maniscalco

Listen: Why Is Louie DeJoy Still the US Postmaster? NY Metro Postal Union Prez Sounds Alarm Again!

By Bob Hennelly with Joe Maniscalco

We’ve already reported extensively on the curious case of Postmaster Louis Dejoy and why he’s still has the job after, you know, trying to systematically dismantle the entire United States Postal Service. You can check out some of that earlier reporting here.

On the latest episode of the Stuck Nation Radio Labor Hour, NY Metro Postal Union President Jonathan Smith [APWU] discusses what he says is a growing disconnect between national union leaders and local unions regarding Louie DeJoy.

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Latest, National Bob Hennelly Latest, National Bob Hennelly

9/11 Betrayal: Lots of Money for War While First Responders Get Short-Changed

By Bob Hennelly

The last-minute decision by Congressional leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, to take the $3.7 billion in funding for the 9/11 WTC Health Program out of the $1.7 trillion Omnibus spending bill is being blasted as a betrayal by 9/11 WTC civilian survivors and the unions that represent essential workers that continue to lose members to WTC diseases.

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Latest, National Bob Hennelly Latest, National Bob Hennelly

U.S. Rep Calls Railroad Worker Sick Time ‘The American Thing to Do’ - Anticipates Executive Order

By Bob Hennelly

Courtesy of InsiderNJ

While the issue of Congress imposing an unpopular rail contract on the nation’s 115,000 workers that lacked paid sick time to precent a strike may have faded from the headlines, a series of high energy union rallies across the country on Dec. 13 are adding pressure on President Biden to issue an executive order mandating paid sick days for rail workers.

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Latest, National Joe Maniscalco Latest, National Joe Maniscalco

‘This Is Working’ In America Today…

By Joe Maniscalco

Jennifer Bateman Grace has thought a lot about working — the nature of work, what it means to work, and what our work means to us. Those deep meditations have now resulted in an ongoing series of whimsical YouTube video shorts about working in America today — and they’re every bit as insightful as they are fun to watch.

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Commentary, Latest, National Bob Hennelly Commentary, Latest, National Bob Hennelly

Memo to President: Working Sick Kills – See COVID

By Bob Hennelly

Courtesy of InsiderNJ

It’s been a week since President Biden and a Democratic Congress took the draconian step of imposing a labor pact that most of the nation’s 125,000 rail workers voted down because it lacked more than one sick day per year. The last time this happened was in 1992 when President George W. Bush did it.

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Latest, National Bob Hennelly Latest, National Bob Hennelly

Loco-Motive: Pact Forced On US Railroad Workers; Sick Days Still In Doubt…

By Bob Hennelly

The House of Representatives voted Nov. 30 to impose a tentative pact reached between the nation’s freight railroads and labor leaders back in September. The deal was subsequently rejected by the rank and file of four of the industry’s larger unions but approved by several others. The 290 to 137 bipartisan House vote came after President Biden requested Congressional intervention to head off “a potentially crippling national rail shutdown” on Dec. 9.

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