Two baristas and moms from Ohio and Gig Harbor will lead group delivering 80,000+ petition signatures to Starbucks corporate headquarters calling for an equitable parental leave policy
Read MoreWEDNESDAY: Rally at Rep. Newhouse’s Yakima office for immigrant rights & affordable healthcare
Rep. Dan Newhouse has refused to schedule a single town hall meeting or other public event during this week’s Congressional recess. So community members are bringing our voices to him with a march and rally calling on our representative to hear our voice on immigrant rights, affordable healthcare, and worker issues.
Read More"Did State Rep Matt Manweller just endorse slavery?" — 2000+ asking as Legislature convenes
Email controversy rages around State Rep. Manweller over his remarks on Civil War and minimum wage
As the State Legislature convenes today, an email controversy is raging around the House Republican Assistant Floor Leader, State Rep. Matt Manweller (R, 13th LD - Ellensburg).
After Manweller tweeted in early January that “$0 would be a perfect min wage,” a voter pointed out that $0/hour hasn't been allowed since the Civil War. This was his response:
Since that shocking comment went public just a day ago, more than 2,000 Working Washington supporters from the Ellensburg area and across the state have sent messages to Manweller asking him to explain what he possibly meant by that.
We await his answer.
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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org
RunForTheMoney.org from Working Washington reveals which candidates are benefitting from big-dollar investments by anti-worker groups — one of them called “Working Families”
A new analysis of political campaign spending in Washington reveals the same lobby groups and political funds that are opposing Initiative 1433 to raise the minimum wage have already invested a massive $1.8 million in State Legislative elections, much of it through “Independent Expenditure” funds with misleading names like “Community Progress”, “Good Government Leadership Council,” and even “Working Families” — which even in the world of politics is a startlingly cynical name for a group funded by minimum wage opponents.
Read MoreHISTORY MADE: Seattle passes groundbreaking secure scheduling law by unanimous vote
With 9-0 vote to pass secure scheduling, Seattle City Council makes labor history
Coffee, food, and retail workers win new right to know when they’re going to work and how may hours they’re going to get
By a unanimous vote this afternoon, Seattle made labor history once again by passing secure scheduling — the first new labor standard to address weekly work schedules since overtime pay became law in the 1930s. This landmark victory in Seattle is only the beginning in the fight for balanced and flexible schedules in Washington State and across the country.
When Seattle workers with Working Washington won the nation’s first citywide $15/hour law in 2014, it set a new standard that everyone should receive a living wage for every hour they work. San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, and California soon followed with $15 laws of their own. And in November, people across Washington state will vote on Initiative 1433, a ballot measure which will substantially raise the statewide minimum wage to $13.50/hour and provide paid sick time.
With today’s unanimous vote to pass secure scheduling, Seattle workers are once again breaking new ground by establishing a new principle: that everyone should know when they’re going to work and how many hours they’re going to get.
“Today is the just beginning for secure scheduling,” said Working Washington Executive Director Sejal Parikh. “Seattle workers made this happen, but the crisis of unpredictable and unstable work schedules doesn’t end at the city limits. In just the last few days we’ve seen the mayor of New York City announce plans to take on secure scheduling, and they’re surely only the first to follow. We look forward to seeing who’s next as a new wave sweeps across the nation in the footsteps of the fight for $15.”
The minimum wage hits $15/hour for the first group of Seattle workers on January 1, 2017. The secure scheduling ordinance takes effect six months later, on July 1, 2017.
For more details see our previous release or check out our secure scheduling press kit.
TODAY: Seattle to make labor history with final vote to pass secure scheduling legislation
“Secure scheduling is the the first new labor standard to address weekly work schedules since overtime pay became law in the 1930s. Seattle is breaking new ground that will change the balance of power in coffee, food, and retail workplaces across the city." — Sejal Parikh, Executive Director, Working Washington
Read MoreKey Council vote today on secure scheduling as two new studies underscore extent & impact of issue
A key Seattle City Council committee is set to vote Tuesday morning on whether or not to advance who would be the nation’s strongest secure scheduling ordinance to a vote of the full council — at the same time as two new reports underscore the extent and impact of unstable & insecure schedules. See below for key takeaways from these two reports.
Read MoreMONDAY @ 3pm: Top national experts on work scheduling convene in Seattle
As Mayor Murray and Seattle City Council move forward on a landmark secure scheduling ordinance, three of the nation’s preeminent experts on the extent and impacts of unpredictable & unstable scheduling practices will convene Monday afternoon in downtown Seattle to share their research & policy expertise.
Who: Three of the nation’s preeminent experts on work scheduling practices: Anna Haley-Lock, Daniel Schneider, and Kristen Harknett
What: Share their research & policy expertise as it relates to the movement for secure scheduling in Seattle.
When: TODAY — Monday, August 22, 2016 at 3pm
Where: Working Washington office in downtown Seattle: 719 3rd Ave, Seattle, WA 98104
Note: Space is limited; please RSVP to sage@workingwa.org if you plan to attend.
BIOGRAPHICAL INFO:
Dr. Anna Haley-Lock is Associate Professor at Rutgers University’s School of Social Work. She previously was on the faculties of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and University of Washington. Her work investigates employers’ choices about designing, managing, and rewarding jobs, including an ongoing study of big box retailer Costco; and how those practices relate to a range of employment outcomes experienced by organizations and their workforces, most recently including parental engagement in and experiences with their children’s schooling and care. Prof. Haley-Lock has focused on low-wage or “working poverty” jobs in for-profit, nonprofit and public settings, including retail stores, restaurants, long-term care facilities, domestic violence services programs, the US Postal Service, and occupations disproportionately held by vulnerable groups of workers such as women and primary or sole family caregivers. Her findings have identified “upstream” strategies for changing workplaces and public employment policies to promote worker, family, and community economic and social wellbeing, and have been published in varied journals (e.g., Social Service Review, Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, Work & Occupations, Industrial Relations, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, and Community, Work & Family).
Daniel Schneider is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at UC Berkeley. After receiving his Ph.D. in Sociology from Princeton, he was a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholar in Health Policy Research at UC Berkeley from 2012-2014. His research focuses on household economic security and on how economic inequality shapes the settings in which children grow up. His recent research documents the effects of the Great Recession on American families. Schneider’s current research examines how work schedule instability and unpredictability in the retail sector shape worker and child health and wellbeing. His research has been published in the American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Demography, and other outlets.
Dr. Kristen Harknett is an Adjunct Associate Professor in the Sociology Department at the University of Pennsylvania and a Visiting Scholar at UC Berkeley's Department of Demography. Her research focuses on how policies impact the lives of low-income families, economic influences on family stability, and the reliance on kin support among low-income families. Her prior work has been published in the American Sociological Review, Demography, Social Forces, and several other journals. She is currently collaborating with Daniel Schneider from UC Berkeley on the Retail Work and Family Life Study, a study of scheduling practices in the retail sector and their effects on workers' health, well-being, and family life. This study has collected survey data from several thousand retail and food service workers nationwide.
More information:
- Summary of key secure scheduling policies.
- Background on the movement for secure scheduling in Seattle.
- Proposed Seattle ordinance on secure scheduling.
Workers to speak on secure scheduling policy proposal ahead of key hearing
Workers and community leaders will hold a City Hall press conference on the secure scheduling policies proposed by Mayor Murray, Councilmember Herbold, and Councilmember Gonzalez, just prior to a key City Council hearing where details of the proposals are set to be discussed
Read MoreTHURSDAY: Baristas, performers, and City Councilmembers to attend secure scheduling story slam!
Story slammers to take the stage with true tales of insecure, unpredictable schedules — featuring David Schmader, Hanna Brooks Olsen, Paul Constant, Ebo Barton, Lisa Herbold, Mike O’Brien, and more!
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