News & Commentary June 6, 2023
https://onlabor.org/june-6-2023/
By Elyse Weissberger
In todays News and Commentary, President Biden nominates Suzanne Summerlin for permanent general counsel at the Federal Labor Relations Authority, hundreds of journalists across the country walked off the job yesterday to demand leadership change at newspaper chain giant Gannett, and a pro-union resolution in Pennsylvania sparked debate over which political party better supports the working class.
In his third attempt to fill a years-long vacancy of a permanent general counsel at the Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA), President Biden nominated Suzanne Elizabeth Summerlin. The FLRA governs relations between the federal government and its employees. The agency issues unfair labor practice complaints and investigates and prosecutes labor charges on behalf of the 1.2 million civil servants in bargaining units. The Senate has not confirmed a nominee to the role since 2019. If confirmed, Summerlin will replace Acting General Counsel Charlotte Dye, who has been serving in the role since March 2021. In February of this year, the U.S. Government Accountability Office reported that Dyes service was in violation of the Vacancies Act, as it had extended well beyond the 300-day allowance for acting service for a presidentially appointed, Senate-confirmed position.
Unionized journalists at two dozen local newspapers owned by Gannet, the nations largest newspaper chain, struck on Monday. Journalists from California, Arizona, Texas, Indiana, New York, New Jersey, Georgia, and Florida demanded an end to extreme budget cuts and leadership changes at headquarters. The strikes coincided with Gannetts annual shareholder meeting, where CEO and chairman of the board, Mike Reed, was reelected. During Reeds tenure, Gannett shares have dropped more than 60%, several newsrooms have closed, 401-K contributions have been suspended, and many employees have experienced forced furloughs. The companys workforce has shrunk by approximately 47%. In the last five years, 18 Gannett newsrooms have unionized, and two additional Georgian newspapers voted to unionize on Monday. The union is calling for an annual base salary of $60,000 and a lowering of the CEO-to-employee compensation ratio, from 66:1 to 20:1.
FULL story at link above.