Skip to main content

What I’ve Been Reading This Week


Between a few articles noting minimum wage hikes in Florida and Washington & efforts by organized labor to push through President Joe Biden’s spending plan, I point readers to an update on the National Labor Relations Board General Counsel and the steps she intends to take to advance a labor friendly agenda.  Granted, having a plan to advance a labor friendly agenda and actually putting it into place are two different stories.  With that being said, I refer readers to the article to get a sense of what we might see coming from the National Labor Relations Board in the coming months.

As always, below are a couple articles that caught my eye this week.


Labor Unions Lend Financial Support to Back President Biden’s Spending Package

The Wall Street Journal published an article today in which it noted the aggressive efforts by organized labor to get President Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion spending package approved by Congress.  Between millions of dollars being spent by the Service Employees International Union to lobby Congress and the American Federation of Teachers taking to the phones to “dial” up support for the spending package, labor unions are breaking out the big guns to try and help the spending package get across the finish line.  Given that the spending package would provide significant financial aid to many labor friendly policies is reason enough for organized labor doing what they can to assure passage.  Will it be enough?  At this point, it is hard to say but if I were a betting man, I think some sort of spending package will eventually find enough support to reach President Biden’s desk for signature.


Florida’s Hourly Minimum Wage Rate Just Went Into Effect…What’s Next?

Readers might recall hearing about a constitutional amendment being approved by voters in Florida last November which resulted in an hourly minimum wage hike for workers across the state.  Yesterday, the hourly minimum wage rate went from $8.65/hour to $10/hour.  (Tipped workers saw their hourly pay rate rise from $5.63/hour to $6.98/hour.)  However, although this was a significant pay increase for hourly workers in Florida, this is not the end of it.  By September of 2026, hourly workers in the state will see their pay rates rise to $15/hour (and tipped workers will earn $11.98/hour.)  I would hope that Florida employers have already taken steps to prepare for yesterday’s pay raise.  Irrespective of the change to the hourly pay rate that went into effect yesterday, now is as good of a time as any to prepare for the upcoming pay hikes in the coming years.


NLRB’s General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo Lays Out Labor Friendly Agenda

Jennifer Abruzzo, General Counsel at the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), has made it no secret that she intends to steer the NLRB toward a more labor friendly agenda than her predecessor.  (With the NLRB trending more toward a more labor friendly iteration already, this should not come as much of a surprise.)  With that being said, Abruzzo recently sat down for an interview in which she set out some of the labor friendly policies she seeks to enact while serving as General Counsel.  Whether or not all these ideas come to fruition remain to be seen…but employers should take stock of what ideas Abruzzo has to help bolster unions in the coming years.


Washington State Increasing Minimum Wage Rate For 2022

Earlier this week, the Washington Department of Labor & Industries announced that the hourly minimum wage rate in the state would be increasing in January of 2022 to account for the rising cost of consumer items such as gasoline, food, and housing.  The current hourly minimum wage rate will increase 5.83% from $13.69/hour to $14.49/hour.  I refer readers to this announcement for more information.  For employers in Washington, now is as good of a time as any to start making plans to accommodate this upcoming pay raise.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NLRB: Discussion Among Employees About Tip Pooling is Protected Concerted Activity

  This Advice Memorandum from the National Labor Relations Board’s Associate General Counsel, Jayme Sophir, addressed whether employees which discussed and complained about tip pooling at work constituted protected concerted activity. In relevant part, an employer in New York operated a chain of steakhouses.  While tip pooling was in place at these steakhouses, some of the employees objected to it on the grounds that it was not transparent and improperly divided tips among the workers.  Employees were told not to complain or talk to each other about the tip pool and were told that doing so would endanger their jobs.  Despite the employer later attempting to provide some clarity as to how the tips were being divided, rancor still existed among some employees.  At one point, the employees were told by a general manager that some employees that had been talking about the tip pool were “cleared out” and the employer would continue to do so. In the Advice Memorandum, it was noted that emplo

What I’ve Been Reading This Week

A few years ago, I remember when the “Fight for $15” movement was taking off around the country.  Lo and behold, it appears that a $15/hour minimum wage is not the stopping point, which should be no surprise.  As the below article notes, New York is aggressively moving to ramp up hourly wage rates even higher.  While all the  below articles are worth a read, I called particular attention to that one. As always, below are a couple article that caught my eye this week. Disney World Workers Reject Latest Contract Offer Late last week, it was announced that workers at Disney World had rejected the most recent contract offer from the company, calling on their employer to do better.  As Brooks Barnes at The New York Times writes, the unions that represent about 32,000 workers at Disney World reported their members resoundingly rejected the 5 year contract offer which would have seen workers receive a 10% raise and retroactive increased back pay.  While Disney’s offer would have increased pa

Utah Non-Compete Bill Falters in House

Last month, a non-compete bill sponsored by Representative Brian Greene (Republican from Pleasant Grove) & up for vote in the Utah House failed to make it through the Legislature.  The bill sought to ban enforcement of non-competes if they came after a worker was already employed, given no compensation (such as a bonus or promotion) for signing the non-compete, and laid off within six months.  However, by a 22 - 49 vote, the bill was resoundingly defeated after some business groups lobbied to kill the non-compete bill.  One group in particular, The Free Enterprise Utah coalition, argued that the Utah State Legislature should hold off on any changes to non compete laws in the state until a survey about non competes was done among Utah businesses.  Representative Greene had countered this claim and argued that a survey was not needed to show that the current non compete laws in the states allowed many businesses, including some small high tech companies in the state, to per