LABOR What Workers Face This Labor Day On Monday, President Obama will celebrate America's 127th Labor Day by giving a speech on "jobs, the economy and maybe a little health care" at the annual AFL-CIO picnic in Cincinnati, OH. Despite positive indications that the U.S. economy is beginning to "climb out of the worst recession in decades," Obama's speech will come at a difficult time for America's workers as job losses continue. In the current recession, 6.7 million jobs have been lost through July, with another 216,000 jobs lost in August. Even those who are still working are facing significant challenges. Earlier this week, a new report financed by the Ford, Joyce, Haynes, and Russell Sage Foundations found that labor protections in America "are failing significant numbers of workers." According to the survey, which was "the most comprehensive examination of wage-law violations in a decade," 68 percent of the low wage workers who were interviewed said they were subjected to pay violations in their previous work week alone. This included 26 percent who were paid less than the minimum wage and 76 percent who didn't receive legally required overtime pay. In all, the researchers discovered that "the typical worker had lost $51 the previous week through wage violations, out of average weekly earnings of $339," adding up to a 15 percent loss in pay. The report "clearly shows we still have a major task before us," said Labor Secretary Hilda Solis in a statement, promising that the Department of Labor in the Obama administration "will be marked by an emphasis on the protection" of the rights of America's workers. NEED FOR MORE LABOR PROTECTIONS: In December 2008, the American Worker Project at the Center for American Progress released a report noting that "one of the hallmarks of President George W. Bush's administration has been its failure to enforce laws designed to protect ordinary Americans," particularly the Labor Department's "inadequate enforcement of important workplace protections." The Obama administration has pushed to clean up the mess, requesting a 10 percent budget increase for worker protection programs. Solis told the New York Times this week that she is currently in the process of hiring 250 more wage-and-hour investigators. But as the Wonk Room's Pat Garofalo points out, this effort "should be complemented by the Senate confirming the Labor Department nominees who are still stuck in no-man's land. This will help put in place people willing to enforce the wage laws that are on the books, but were neglected under former Labor Secretary Elaine Chao." In particular, the administration's nominee to run the Wage and Hour Division, Lorelei Boylan, is still stuck in the Senate. Additionally, last week, Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY), ranking Republican on the Senate HELP Committee, asked President Obama to withdraw his nomination for Patricia Smith to be Department of Labor Solicitor, citing "inconsistent testimony" regarding a program that she launched in New York to monitor wage theft. According to the New York Times, there are currently five Labor Deptartment nominees awaiting Senate confirmation. AFL-CIO Secretary Treasurer Richard Trumka -- who is running unopposed for the AFL-CIO presidency -- told the Wonk Room that those in Congress who are holding up the nominees are doing so "because they don't want those positions filled." THE STATE OF UNION MEMBERSHIP: As Center for American Progress Action Fund analysts David Madland and Karla Walter have written, more workers with union jobs are good for the economy. In 2008, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, "union members accounted for 12.4 percent of employed wage and salary workers, up from 12.1 percent a year earlier." Though union membership rose from 2006 to 2008, the percentage of American workers who belong to a union is still significantly lower than it was in 1983, the first year for which comparable union date are available. In speech this week explaining why no Republicans will vote for the Employee Free Choice Act -- which would make it easier for workers to join a union -- Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) claimed that workers don't actually want to join unions due to the "very enlightened management in this country now." But this isn't true. According to an AFL-CIO survey found, there are 60 million American workers who say that they would join a union if they could. The reason they haven't isn't because of a lack of desire. A study by the Economic Policy Institute found that employers fought back against unionization efforts by threatening "to close plants in 57 percent of the campaigns and...cut wages and benefits in 47 percent," while firing pro-union workers 34 percent of the time. Employers use tactics such as forced one-on-one meetings with supervisors to "to intimidate workers and determine their support for unionization." THE CHALLENGES FOR YOUNG WORKERS: Earlier this week, the AFL-CIO released a new report, "Young Workers, A Lost Decade," which found that workers younger than 35 have "not only have young workers lost financial ground over the past 10 years -- they have also lost some of their optimism." Alarmingly, the nationwide survey found that "31 percent of young workers reports being uninsured, up from 24 percent without health insurance coverage 10 years ago" and "one-third of young workers cannot pay the bills and seven in 10 do not have enough saved to cover two months of living expenses." When the AFL-CIO conducted a similar survey in 1999, it found that more than 75 percent of young workers were more hopeful than worried about their economic future. In 2009, just over half feel that way, a 22 percent drop. Perhaps the most illustrative data point from the survey for the plight that young workers face is that nearly one in three of them "will be laboring on Labor Day; they are significantly more likely to be at work on this holiday than workers older than 35. Even fewer low-income young workers have the day off." Young workers are much more likely than older workers to believe that "labor unions are necessary to protect the working person." ![UNDER THE RADAR](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uw0ktkr1UdXXEyN2CdTcAxssoWZ5bKXAdZYYTI_GzkDpsiziZnWIto2y0_3AmsdQTkkm6Rw1LKcT6an7U6vdod8hJajmP7W5hZ33IHQT4bLx9_60U=s0-d) ETHICS -- WHITE HOUSE TO RELEASE VISITOR LOGS: Today, President Obama announced that for the first time in history, the public will have access to the "names of thousands of visitors whose comings and goings traditionally are kept secret by presidents." "We will achieve our goal of making this administration the most open and transparent administration in history not only by opening the doors of the White House to more Americans, but by shining a light on the business conducted inside," Obama said in a statement. The new policy, set to begin in a couple of weeks, will disclose "who set up the meeting, where it was held and for how long" -- though specific requests for visits made before mid-September will be reviewed on an individual basis. Under President Bush, the White House kept visitor logs secret and denied requests from news organizations and watchdog groups that sought to "make the records public to show who was influencing administration policy on health care, financial rules and other issues." The administration's reversal would "resolve four lawsuits filed by a watchdog group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), against the Obama and Bush administrations seeking details on White House meetings." While campaigning for the White House, Obama criticized Vice President Cheney's secret energy meetings: "When big oil companies are invited into the White House for secret energy meetings, it's no wonder they end up with billions in tax breaks." The reversal also follows through on a memo Obama issued the day after the Inauguration, in which he said, "[M]y Administration is committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in Government." | ![THINK FAST](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_v9Z5xPvP3BB0JSf4YBqxUbdvksbCgVqkwS0mJKmDPgzdE0hvhn_8DT51eUzwdrjeinfR_qK0EQA3bpELaVTnA5st7Gxgk99nGo269ZMERcrWwCwpZm=s0-d) House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) is pushing back on signals from the White House that it will back a health care bill without a public option, saying any bill "without a strong public option will not pass the House." "Any real change requires the inclusion of a strong public option to promote competition and bring down costs," Pelosi said. "If a vigorous public option is not included, it would be a major victory for the health insurance industry." Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) seemed to indicate his support for a public plan trigger. "If we don't see more competition in the system, we might revisit it [a public option] down the road," he said. Warner said he aligns himself with moderate Democrats in the Senate, whom he calls "radical centrists." For the second time in recent days, White House environment adviser Van Jones apologized for a previous statement he made. Yesterday, Jones explained that he does "not agree" with a statement he signed that suggested the Bush administration was complicit in the 9/11 attacks. Jones earlier apologized for calling Republicans "a**holes." Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is planning to approve the construction of hundreds of new housing units deep into the West Bank before slowing down construction, two of his aides said. The move comes at a time when U.S. policy is to call for a complete settlement freeze in the West Bank without exception. Afghan officials say a NATO airstrike early Friday in the northern region of Afghanistan killed at least 80 people, many of them civilians. While NATO officials maintained that they were targeting insurgents, local Afghan officials pointed out that the airstrikes were directed against two fuel tankers that many civilians were siphoning gasoline from. South Carolina State Sen. Jake Knotts (R) is alleging in a letter that Gov. Mark Sanford (R) is behind a whisper campaign suggesting that Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer is gay. Sanford's office denied the claims contained in Knotts' letter "as bizarre as many of the other claims and attacks of recent weeks." A California legislative effort to honor Harvey Milk, the state's first openly gay elected leader, is meeting stiff resistance. Conservatives are pushing hard for Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) to veto legislation which would proclaim Milk's May 22 birthday "a day of recognition and encourage schools to consider commemorating his life." And finally: Who is Miyuki Hatoyama, Japan's new first lady? The UK Independent notes that last year, Hatoyama wrote a book in which she revealed that she was once abducted by aliens. "While my body was asleep, I think my soul rode on a triangular-shaped UFO and went to Venus," she said. "It was a very beautiful place, and it was very green." She also claims that she knows actor Tom Cruise "in a former incarnation -- when he was Japanese." "I believe he'd get it if I said to him, 'Long time no see', when we meet," she said in a recent interview. | | | ![DAILY GRILL](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_sovKtr9KnZDfIo4xoughwtosNyMGp3ifSCNhvGhjHHdFX8Aqc8tvC-Ag99shtbGk3T-i3tJxl-F7nTtxIlZnRDJdPPeKwI81RsxzhKWA3S3SdJTITbwQ=s0-d) "I don't support the investigation by the department because this is a matter that has already been reviewed thoroughly." -- Gonzales, 9/3/2009 VERSUS "I think it is legitimate to question and examine that conduct to ensure people are held accountable for their actions." -- Former attorney general Alberto Gonzales defending Attorney General Holder's investigation into CIA abuse, 9/1/2009 | |
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