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An inspiring new short film is a tool to introduce younger women to the labor movement.
Hundreds of immigrants at a Tacoma, Washington, detention center began a hunger strike Friday in response to substandard living conditions at the hands of the for-profit center’s overseers.
Oops! Evaluation scores used to determine which teachers are retained, rewarded, and even fired were miscalculated, D.C. teachers learned.
It’s been a bumpy road for SuperShuttle drivers attempting to organize at three D.C.-area airports. To win recognition, the drivers must prove they are employees—of a global corporation that charges them high fees to work.
What does the union do when a member harasses another member? Our bedrock is that we are for unity of all workers.
Teamsters in Rhode Island stunned the union old guard when they took back their statewide local last fall—thanks to this clever twist on phonebanking. Their get-out-the-vote campaign made the difference between victory and defeat.
Since sexual harassment is about power, not sex, it’s not surprising that low-wage women in lousy jobs get a lot of it.
Last year the typical woman worker made $15.10 an hour, while the typical man made $18.11. The persistent gender wage gap affects earners at all levels, high to low, from the boardroom on down.
The lockout of Pacific Northwest grain workers has hit a full year. They marked the grim anniversary with an early-morning direct action.
Resumenes de artículos de Labor Notes de los EEUU, semana de 24 febrero, en español e inglés. Summaries of Labor Notes stories from the U.S. for the week of February 24, in Spanish and English. Please pass them on to your Spanish-speaking friends.
Bus drivers in northern Vermont are set to walk out March 10. The local solidarity they’ve mustered could serve as an example for transit workers battling similarly extreme conditions around the country.
An excerpt from Labor Notes' new book, How to Jump-Start Your Union, shows how Chicago Teachers Union activists in the Caucus of Rank-and-File Educators campaigned for top offices, and won.
Bosses hate a salt—a pro-union worker who’s taken a job with the intent to organize. Many who salt say there are advantages to organizing from inside the workplace.
After coming to the brink of what would have been the first strike in their union’s history, teachers are instead voting on a contract that reduces workload significantly.
Tenure and non-tenure faculty at University of Illinois at Chicago went on strike February 18 and 19 for the first time in the university’s history.