July 31, 2020
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The Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup: While the Outlook Darkens, We Celebrate Some Small Victories

The clock has essentially wound down on extending assistance for the 30+ million Americans currently on the unemployment rolls. White House officials and Congressional Democrats remain miles apart, with the latter rejecting a temporary extension of the benefits. To say this puts an uncertain shroud over the coming weeks would be a massive understatement as unemployment numbers remain high, with new applicants increasing to 1.43 million, and states post record deaths and Deborah Birx and other federal officials warn of a coming surge in Midwestern states, including Kansas, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Missouri. There is some hope that if politicians can reach an agreement over continued enhanced benefits, they will be retroactive, but this is little comfort to people with mortgages or rent to pay. There are also huge question marks over issues we focus on, particularly child care and employment law, both of which were in the news this week and are the subject of several of the stories we feature. Welcome to the weekly roundup.

California child care workers vote to unionize

In many of our blogs about child care, one thing we are at pains to point out is how much domestic care relies on poor, often Black or Brown labor, whether it is a nanny, a housekeeper, or a entry-level worker at a daycare. The coronavirus pandemic has demonstrated how precarious these jobs are and how little workers in those respective industries get paid. However, this week was a bright spot for some of these workers in California. Last year, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law the right for child care providers of children in low-income families to collectively bargain, and this week those providers voted overwhelmingly to accept Child Care Providers United (CCPU) to represent them. CCPU is an organization built by SEIU and AFSCME. While this is a fantastic first step for child care providers, whose wages are so measly that they often qualify for government assistance themselves, there will be a difficult road ahead for CCPU. Budget cuts and Janus v. AFSCME both represent large obstacles for the fledgling union to overcome. 

Ride Hail Drivers Also Relishing a Victory This Week

Sticking with precarious work and partial victories, a New York federal judge this week ruled that Uber and Lyft drivers must be treated the same as other workers when it comes to unemployment benefits. The lawsuit was brought against the State of New York, which the plaintiffs, New York Taxi Workers Alliance alleged had taken months, rather than weeks, to provide unemployment assistance, and Judge LaShann DeAarcy Hall singled out Uber’s and Lyft’s egregious behavior in regards to avoiding the bare minimum of employment protections, such as minimum wage and state unemployment benefits schemes, which the companies have gone to great lengths to avoid paying into, arguing drivers are independent contractors. The two companies are currently pouring millions into a California ballot initiative which would solidify the companies’ position that drivers are independent contractors and help them avoid paying workers.

A History Lesson on Child Care

Finally, back to child care, The American Prospect has a long, fascinating article on the history of childcare in the United States. Sonya Michel reminds readers that we have faced this kind of child care demand before, during World War II, when women were conscripted into factory work. The federal government realized that for women to work in the industrial war effort, child care was necessary. In an attempt to address this issue, the federal government financed 3,000 child care centers around the country, which, as Michel describes, was inadequate. Michel’s history brings us to the present where a similar issue confronts politicians. The CARES Act, too, has language calling for the stabilization of the childcare market as “essential” workers are required to remain at work despite public school and child care facility closures. The question is, will we once again allow child care to slip down the hierarchy of concerns, as we did after WWII, or will politicians and the American people realize finally that free, universal child care, not market-driven privatized care or means-tested, strings-attached aid, is essential for society? We can only hope.

New York State Human Rights Law Invoked in Sexual Harassment Arbitration Case

August 11, 2020
Sexual Harassment
A split has appeared in how to handle sexual harassment cases with a New York trial judge ruling recently that the state’s Human Rights Law prevents companies and employees from entering arbitration over sexual harassment. This contradicts an earlier ruling in New York’s Southern District where a judge ruled that arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) supersedes New York’s statutory prohibition against arbitration.

The First Recession for Women

August 11, 2020
Gender Discrimination
There is a new feature to the pandemic-induced recession that has decimated employment, manufacturing, child care, education, and just about every other facet of life. It is women, not men who are the most greatly affected by the force of the shutdown.

The Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup: Black Pregnancy in New York City and School Reopening Reversals

August 10, 2020
Race Discrimination
Pregnancy Discrimination
We’re now a week into the expiration of the enhanced unemployment benefits of the CARES Act and the news is not good. Congress and the White House remain at least a trillion of dollars apart on a new deal, with the Senate GOP split, though their prized bit of the CARES Act, the corporate bailout, did not have an expiration date, unlike those parts aimed at protecting workers, such as the PUA and eviction moratoriums. Thus, with depressing predictability, there were a spate of alarming stories this week echoing the fears that tenant unions and activists have been voicing for months: by ending employment relief we are hurtling toward a cliff, over which lies massive, nationwide evictions.

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