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Berry pickers in Washington State went on multiple strikes last year, demanding justice for a fired co-worker, 70 cents per pound of berries picked, and an end to sexist and racist harassment by their supervisors.
It’s official: with a unanimous city council vote, Seattle yesterday adopted a roadmap to a $15 minimum wage.
If the Social Security Administration replaces its field offices with Internet services and an 800 phone number, it may hit you in the wallet. Jane Slaughter explains.
Jane Slaughter retires today from the Labor Notes staff, although not from Labor Notes.
A mail carrier found out through a manager’s slip of the tongue that the Postal Service was trying to force seniors in a local retirement community to walk to the corner for their mail.
Labor priests are once again gaining numbers, to advocate for workers and to walk with them.
The opposition IAM Reform slate took a third of the vote in the election for international officers.
San Francisco General Hospital nurses flooded city hall and are planning a strike vote to redress severe staffing shortages at the city's premier public hospital.
The Social Security Administration’s “Vision 2025” would close most of the agency's 1,000 community field offices in the U.S., laying off 30,000 of the workers who help beneficiaries navigate the system.
Retail sales and customer service reps voted 2 to 1 to join the Communications Workers at six Brooklyn Verizon stores. The wireless side of telecom has remained largely unorganized, but these new unionists hope to cause a ripple effect.
The company had boasted of slashing costs from $130 per ton of coal to just $24. Yet the prime minister called the accident unavoidable, touching off renewed protests.
Mother Jones once proclaimed Illinois to be “the best-organized labor state in America,” and the people of the Illinois coalfields—where Kevin Corley’s new novel Sixteen Tons takes place—were always at the center of the action.
The call for “$15 and a union” went up again today, but with a new—and bigger—group of allies. As striking fast food workers hit picket lines across the U.S., supporters and workers rallied in 30 other countries.
Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe is downplaying financial gains at the Postal Service, which has been reporting revenue increases for five straight quarters. Why is Donahoe minimizing the winning streak?
The new statewide president of the 110,000-member Massachusetts teachers’ union made her name leading a standardized test boycott.