Union membership as a percentage of all U.S. workers dropped from 10.8% to 10.3% in 2021, returning to its 2019 level. The bump in 2020 is instructive, since it came because, in the mass job loss of the pandemic, more nonunion workers lost their jobs. But the lousy numbers for union membership are also important to understand in the context of popular opinion and U.S. labor law. Because public approval of unions is at its highest point since 1965, according to a 2021 Gallup survey.
The AFL-CIO pointed to the latter factor in responding to the new numbers. “In 2021, workers forcefully rejected low-wage, thankless jobs after a year of being called essential,” AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler said in a statement. “In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is clearer now than ever that our labor laws are designed to make joining a union as difficult as possible. Across this country, workers are organizing for a voice on the job and millions of Americans are standing in solidarity with union members on strike. If everyone who wanted to join a union was able to do so, membership would skyrocket. The PRO Act and the Public Service Freedom to Negotiate Act are how we get there.”
● Striking King Soopers workers and Kroger reached a tentative deal on Friday. The strike, which began January 12, ended immediately. Workers will vote on ratifying the deal on Monday, January 24.
● The largest political contribution in Massachusetts history is a recent $13 million from Lyft promoting a ballot measure to ensure that its workers are treated as independent contractors, not employees.
● Here’s just a sample of recent workplace deaths, pulled together by Jordan Barab. One of many:
● Workers at two more Boston-area Starbucks are seeking to unionize, making it a total of four stores in the Boston area, along with many others across the country.
● Nurses speak out on hospital staffing problems: We Know the Real Cause of the Crisis in Our Hospitals. It’s Greed.
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The AFL-CIO pointed to the latter factor in responding to the new numbers. “In 2021, workers forcefully rejected low-wage, thankless jobs after a year of being called essential,” AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler said in a statement. “In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is clearer now than ever that our labor laws are designed to make joining a union as difficult as possible. Across this country, workers are organizing for a voice on the job and millions of Americans are standing in solidarity with union members on strike. If everyone who wanted to join a union was able to do so, membership would skyrocket. The PRO Act and the Public Service Freedom to Negotiate Act are how we get there.”
● Striking King Soopers workers and Kroger reached a tentative deal on Friday. The strike, which began January 12, ended immediately. Workers will vote on ratifying the deal on Monday, January 24.
● The largest political contribution in Massachusetts history is a recent $13 million from Lyft promoting a ballot measure to ensure that its workers are treated as independent contractors, not employees.
● Here’s just a sample of recent workplace deaths, pulled together by Jordan Barab. One of many:
PARK CITY, Utah (ABC4) – A Provo man died after officials say he fell 40 feet from scaffolding while working in Park City on Friday. On the afternoon of Jan. 7, Park City Police officials were called to a construction site in Silver Creek Village on a report of an industrial accident. After arriving on the scene, deputies tended to a worker who had fallen 40 feet off of scaffolding. Sheriff’s Lt. Andrew Wright identified the man as Jose Lopez-Cardenas.
● Workers at two more Boston-area Starbucks are seeking to unionize, making it a total of four stores in the Boston area, along with many others across the country.
● Nurses speak out on hospital staffing problems: We Know the Real Cause of the Crisis in Our Hospitals. It’s Greed.
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Inbox: Sports Illustrated Union voted unanimously today to ratify their contract with SI management and The Arena Group. Per the @nyguild news release, the average employee will see a raise of 13% by April 1 and some underpaid employees will see as much as a 66% pay bump. pic.twitter.com/BXg4P1rlpT
— A.J. Perez (@byajperez) January 21, 2022