May 26, 2020
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A Majority of Americans Support Employment Benefits for Gig Workers

Week after week brings news of millions more Americans joining the unemployment rolls, but according to a new poll undertaken by Data for Progress, Americans, including a majority of Democrats and Republicans, believe that independent contractors, freelancers, and those working in the gig economy, such as ride-hail drivers and delivery people working for app-based services like Door Dash and Instacart deserve some of the same employment protections already given to salaried employees.

As the study reminds us, unlike most other developed nations, and many developing nations, the United States lacks universal social welfare programs, whether it is health or unemployment insurance, parental leave, or accessible housing. And such a reminder is all the more germane as coronavirus exposes just how many workers are shut out of traditional state unemployment schemes. 

We need look no further at the chaos that surrounded the lockdown in New York State where much of the economy relies on many non-traditional workers, whether it’s food delivery or graphic design. In addition to being unable to handle the sheer scale of unemployment, the Department of Labor had no response to such profound employment losses outside state-covered work, leaving it to scramble for answers, which included Pandemic Unemployment Insurance, a program that is set to end in July and is already under attack from Congress and GOP think tanks.

However, according to Data for Progress, there is bipartisan support for including gig workers and freelancers in a number of protections. Some of the other important findings from the poll include:

  • 62% support policies that would give gig workers the same job protections and benefits as traditional employees;
  • 60% support for gig workers having access to employer-sponsored health plans;
  • 64% support for providing gig workers with the same minimum wage protections as traditional employees;
  • 65% support for gig workers to be included in the workers compensation insurance system.

Special Issue of Harvard Law & Policy Review Focuses on Pregnancy

December 7, 2020
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The Harvard Law & Policy review has recently devoted an issue to the special theme of “The Politics of Pregnancy.” It contains numerous responses to and discussions of myriad political issues of pregnancy in the U.S. and abroad, including increased emphasis on maternal health, abortion access, surrogacy, and state intervention into matters of women’s health, including the effects of incarceration on mothers.

Can Employers Require Workers to Get Vaccines?

December 3, 2020
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Now that a vaccine, or more accurately, many vaccines, seems inevitable, an important new question has emerged: Can employers require workers to vaccinate?

Changes to New York Employment Laws to Have Lasting Impact, Says Law360

December 3, 2020
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This week Law 360 published a helpful guide to how the pandemic has changed employment law in New York and what kinds of impacts those changes will have into 2021 and beyond.

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