Subject: A GIG ECONOMY VICTORY FOR COMPANIES STILL LEAVES THE DOOR OPEN FOR UNIONS - LR INK

March 16, 2023

To visit the blog post, click on the link below the article.

A Gig Economy Victory For Companies Still Leaves The Door Open For Unions - LR INK

by Kimberly Ricci


(3 minute read)


The labor laboratory of California continues to provide fertile ground for scouting out developments that could spread across the U.S. Unions are well aware of this state’s general friendliness towards unions, too, and California’s progressive ways often lead to unions gaining a foothold with lawmakers, as with the SEIU’s recent propulsion of the Fast Food Accountability and Standards (FAST) Recovery Act. That law still aims to grant the industry’s workers the right to bargain without a union and boost hourly wages to $22, possibly to the point of financial disaster for franchises.

 

FAST is currently on hold until 2024, when it will land in the hands of voters, but the bill’s progress emboldened the SEIU to push for a statewide minimum $25 wage for healthcare workers in California. As well, another recently proposed bill could allow home healthcare workers to bargain with the state for higher wages. What else?

 

The SEIU came for gig workers, and an appeals court pumped the brakes. 

 

The powerful union is licking its wounds after a federal appeals court reversed a decision and revived a bill, Proposition 22, which had been approved by voters but declared by a lower court to be unconstitutional. With the bill back in action, drivers for app-based companies including Uber and Lyft will remain classified as independent contractors and won’t receive employee-based legal protections, although these app-based companies must pay drivers a minimum wage and reimburse expenses. 

 

A note, however: The appeals court did invalidate the Prop 22 provision that made it more difficult for gig workers to unionize and collectively bargain. So, gig worker organizing remains on the table, and the SEIU is also vowing to file an appeal to the California Supreme Court. The SEIU, which is notorious for sponsoring union-friendly legislations and initiatives like Fight For $15, then ironically went on record to complain that these app-based companies “buy themselves laws.”

 

In other gig economy-related news, the NLRB recently joined forces with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) in an effort to share information between the two agencies and put out mutual feelers for misconduct from employers who electronically monitor workers and/or require them to purchase training supplies and equipment. The expressed goal: to protect workers from becoming indebted to employers and therefore unable to realistically leave and find better employment. 

 

Few people would argue against protecting employees from the latter plight. However, the new arrangement remains murky on how it applies to gig workers, who are currently considered owners of their own independent businesses. As such, gig workers frequently provide their own equipment. 

 

To add another wrinkle: NLRB GC Jennifer Abruzzo’s board aims to eventually revamp worker classification, thereby making it easier for gig workers to be deemed as employees rather than independent contractors. In light of the NLRB/CFPB’s collaboration, reclassification could put the onus for supplying gig workers’ equipment on employers – creating an expensive mess for companies.

 

If Abruzzo’s board is successful in recategorizing gig workers as employees, this collaboration would put gig businesses in the crosshairs of an NLRB that already seems to have it out for them.

Links

**********

Union Bailout

 

Labor Board's New Joint Employer Rule Set For August Release

Link

 

The NLRB's $76 Million Dream

Link

 

National Labor Relations Board And Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Announce New Partnership To Address Employer Surveillance, Monitoring, Data Collection, And Financial Practices In The Workplace

Link

 

Say What? NLRB Rules Employees May Tape Record Others In Violation Of State Law

Link

 

What NLRB's New Collaboration with Consumer Financial Agency Means For Employers

Link

 

7 Things Employers Couldn't Say About Unions if NLRB's General Counsel Has Her Way

Link

 

Tips On Writing Severance Agreements After The NLRB Crackdown

Link

 

NLRB Seeks To Expand Jurisdiction Over Educational Institutions with Religious Affiliations

Link

 

Proposal Would Make It More Difficult To Permanently Replace Economic Strikers

Link

 

**********

Union Corruption

 

Former Union Officer Sentenced to Incarceration for Embezzling More Than $500000

Link

 
**********

Organizing 

 

Ashland Starbucks Workers Announce The Chain’s First Union Organizing Drive In Southern Oregon

Link

 

Under Pressure, Starbucks CEO Agrees To Testify Before U.S. Senate Panel 

Link

 

Starbucks' Howard Schultz Will Testify After Threat Of Subpoena From Bernie Sanders

Link

 

With Voluntary Recognition, Ed Markey's Staff First In The Senate To Unionize

Link

         

With Charge Against Apple, NLRB General Counsel Seeks To Expand Scope Of Protected Concerted Activity 

Link

 

eBay's Trading Card Marketplace TCGPlayer Successfully Unionizes

Link

 

**********

Media/Tech

 

White House Roundtable On Microsoft's Constructive Approach to Union Organizing

Link

 

Walt Disney Animation Studios Production Workers Launch Union Drive With IATSE

Link

 

**********

Education

 

Full-Time Contingent Faculty At New York University Are Unionizing

Link

 

Duke Graduate Students Union Files for Union Election With NLRB

Link

 

Duke University Plans To Challenge Graduate Students’ Union Bid

Link

 

MIT Grad Fellows Prohibited From Unionizing, NLRB Official Says

Link

 

Raises Won During Strike Have $38M Price Tag. How Will UC Berkeley Pay?

Link

 

Striking Temple Graduate Students Offered Another Rotten Contract

Link

 

**********

Healthcare 

 

340-Plus RNs At Adventist Lodi Memorial Vote To Join California Nurses Association Union

Link

 

Burden Of Enforcing Contracts Falling On Healthcare Union Members To ‘Speak Up’

Link

 

After A 2-Year Fight, Sutter Health Nurses Overwhelmingly Ratify A Collective Bargaining Agreement

Link

 

Nurses At A Second Ascension Via Christi Hospital In Wichita Vote To Join National Union

Link

 

MedStar Washington Hospital Center Hiring Hundreds More Nurses In New Deal With Union

Link

 

MedStar Nurses Strike Deal To Hire 1,350 Nurses At D.C. Hospital

Link

 

Muskegon Nursing Facility Workers Plan Picket Next Week After Contract Negotiations Break Down

Link

 

**********

Manufacturing

 

New UAW Regional Director Digs In For A Contract Fight

Link

 

Oklahoma Republican Tells Teamsters Teamsters President ‘Shut Your Mouth’ In Tense Senate Exchange

Link

 

Teamsters President Calls GOP Senator A ‘Greedy CEO' In Heated Exchange

Link

 

Caterpillar Union Workers Vote In Favor Of Another Six-Year Labor Agreement

Link

 

UAW Announces Contract Passes At Caterpillar Amid Widespread Opposition: ‘I Think It’s A Huge Sellout’

Link

 

UAW Statement On Contract Ratification With Caterpillar

Link

 

Mass Firings Continue At Dana As Momentum Builds For Rank-And-File Fight Back

Link

 

UAW Presidential Election Not Expected To Resume Until Mid-March

Link

         

GM Offers Buyouts To ‘Majority’ Of U.S. Salaried Workers

Link

 

**********

Transportation

 

Teamster Carhaulers In Detroit Win Wage Increases, Job Protections Under National Contract

Link

 

**********

Gig Economy

 

California Court Upholds Treating App-Based Drivers As Contractors

Link

 

What NLRB's New Collaboration With Consumer Financial Agency Means For Gig Economy Workers

Link

 

**********

Minimum Rising

 

Raising Minimum Wage Hurts Small Businesses And Workers (Opinion)

Link

 

$18 Minimum Wage In California? What To Know About Next Year’s Ballot Measure

Link

 

Adams Rolls Back $24-An-Hour Minimum Pay Rate For Delivery Workers

Link

 

**********

Aviation

 

Airport Workers Union Says Phil Washington's Bold Leadership Needed at FAA

Link

About Labor Relations INK

Labor Relations INK is published weekly and is edited by Labor Relations Institute, Inc. Feel free to pass this newsletter on to anyone you think might enjoy it. New subscribers can sign up by visiting here.


If you use content from this newsletter please attribute it to Labor Relations Institute and include our website: http://www.LRIonline.com 


Contributing editors for this issue: Phillip Wilson, Greg Kittinger, Michael VanDervort, and Kimberly Ricci 


You are receiving this email because you subscribed to receive our labor relations newsletters and updates. You can manage your email preferences by clicking the link at the bottom of any of our email communications.


About Labor Relations Institute

LRI exists to help our clients thrive and become extraordinary workplaces. We improve the lives of working people by strengthening relationships with their leaders and each other. For over 41 years LRI has led the labor and employee relations industry, driven by our core values and our proven process, the LRI Way.

 

Share