Gig workers with the Pay Up campaign will rally, protest, and deliver bags full of peanuts and other messages to the Postmates Engineering Office. Workers will carry bags saying “PAY UP” and filled with peanuts; share their own stories; read written messages from workers across the country (on peanut-shaped paper); and march with grassroots protest signs.
Read MoreIn Seattle, Bellevue, and across the country...Gig workers rallying for the future of workers rights
If the gig economy is the future of work, then gig workers are launching the future of workers rights next week, with protests, speak-outs and other Pay Up campaign events at Seattle City Hall, the Postmates engineering office in Bellevue, and additional locations across the country to mark the week of Labor Day.
Read MoreOvertime plan wins support of top immigrant rights, women’s rights, public health advocates
Leading immigrant rights, women’s rights, and public health advocates have added their support for the state’s bold plan to restore overtime protections for salaried workers paid up to about $70,000/year. Public hearings are set for next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday in Tumwater, Seattle, and Bellingham.
Read MoreJULY 1: New rights for nannies & housecleaners in Seattle take effect
Beginning Monday, July 1st, nannies, housecleaners, landscapers and other domestic workers in Seattle have new rights at work as the city’s landmark Domestic Workers Bill of Rights takes effect — and they’ll be taking action to make sure the word gets out to workers and employers.
Read MorePostmates workers to launch nationwide "Blitz Up" action for Saturday June 15th
After billion-dollar food delivery app Postmates cut pay by 30% and even eliminated a $4-per-job pay guarantee, workers are fighting back & taking action to raise pay. They’re calling it a Blitz Up, and it’s the first-ever nationwide action by food delivery workers in the gig economy.
Read MoreStripper safety and security bill heads to Washington State House floor
It might very well be a first in Washington state legislative history — a bill affecting people who work at strip clubs that was actually initiated by people who work at strip clubs. Now that bill, HB 1756, has advanced to to the floor of the State House.
Read MoreTUESDAY: “Our time counts, too”: First-ever hearing on statewide secure scheduling bill
Big national chains like McDonald’s, Walmart, and The Olive Garden are driving workers’ lives out of balance. They’re demanding 24/7 availability — even for part-time jobs. They’re not giving people the hours they need to pay the rent. And they’re denying workers the stability and flexibility they need to care for their families, contribute to their communities, and live balanced lives.
Read MoreService workers speak out about their real "Nightmare before Christmas": their work schedules
Join us for this special event to learn from top academic researchers about the magnitude of scheduling issues in Washington State, then hear food & retail workers speak out about their own scheduling nightmares and call for the state legislature to pass a statewide secure scheduling law.
Read MoreIt's about time: L&I rule would restore time-and-a-half pay for overtime for hundreds of thousands of workers
This week, the Washington Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) released its latest draft proposal in the process of updating its overtime rules – a change that could be one of the biggest advances for workers since the fight for $15.
Read MoreInvisible to Powerful: Seattle City Council votes to pass historic domestic workers bill of rights
History, made: Seattle City Council has voted unanimously to pass a groundbreaking municipal Domestic Workers Bill of Rights which ensures nannies & house cleaners get the basic rights and benefits every worker needs — including power on the job.
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