Laborvision
December 07, 2023
1. UAW trying to organize Volkswagen
DETROIT (AP) — More than 1,000 workers at Volkswagen's Tennessee factory have signed cards authorizing a vote on representation by the United Auto Workers, the first plant in the nation to reach that milestone in the UAW's quest to organize more than a dozen nonunion factories.
The union says in a statement Thursday that the VW workers signed on in less than a week.
The factory in Chattanooga employs about 3,800 people who make the VW ID.4 electric vehicle and the Atlas family of gas-powered SUVs. It could become the first test of the union's strategy to simultaneously try to organize the nonunion plants.
The UAW statement says workers have complained about mistreatment by management including mandatory overtime on Saturdays, and they are seeking higher pay. A message was left Thursday seeking comment from VW.
In November, VW gave workers an 11% pay raise at the plant. The raises came after UAW members ratified new contracts with Detroit automakers. The union says VW's pay lags behind what workers make at UAW-represented auto plants.
2. Washington Post has Walkout
More than 700 staffers at The Washington Post launched a 24-hour walkout Thursday after contract negotiations with the newspaper’s leadership have stalled after 18 months.
Reporters, producers, editors and business-side staffers walked off the job and began picketing outside the Post’s enigmatic downtown headquarters in the first protest action at the paper since the mid-1970s.
The Washington Post Guild, a member of the broader Washington-Baltimore NewsGuild, is accusing management of negotiating in “bad faith” as they seek to obtain a contract that they say must address pay disparities and offer employees raises and job protections as layoffs loom at the struggling storied paper.
3. A Former Employee at Airgas states his Termination was based on him having Cancer
An attorney for a former Airgas USA LLC employee with cancer will try to revive his lawsuit alleging his termination for a supposedly positive cannabis test was a pretext for disability discrimination.
4.During Strikes, 17% of LA Entertainment Workers Lost Jobs
It’s hard to measure the full impact of the Hollywood strikes — mainly because the TV and film industry will be facing the ripple effects for years to come — but a new study has revealed one significant immediate hit: 17% of Los Angeles-based showbiz workers lost their jobs during the work stoppages.
5.Fmr. Philadelphia labor leader John Dougherty convicted in embezzlement trial
Dougherty is accused of having embezzled more than $650,000 from electrician's union IBEW Local 98.
6. Yakima fruit grower fined after 2 workers die in tractor rollovers a month apart
#23-032
TUMWATER — A Yakima fruit grower and processor has been fined nearly $300,000 by the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) after two orchard workers died in tractor rollovers almost exactly a month apart.
7. More than 1100 DHL workers went on Strike
(WASHINGTON) – More than 1,100 DHL Express Teamsters at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) went on strike today to protest unfair labor practices and demand the company negotiate a fair contract.
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