Labor News & Commentary June 2, 2024 House Democrats urge the NLRB General Counsel to investigate anti-union retaliation
By Gilbert Placeres
Gilbert Placeres is a student at Harvard Law School.
https://onlabor.org/june-2-2024/
In todays News & Commentary, three more University of California campuses join the strike against the suppression of pro-Palestine protests, the stagnant federal minimum wage erodes the Department of Labors ability to combat wage theft, and House Democrats urge the National Labor Relations Board General Counsel to investigate anti-union retaliation at Google.
On Friday, Holt wrote about UCLA and UC Davis workers walking off the job to join the rolling strike started by UC Santa Cruz workers in response to the University of Californias handling of pro-Palestine protests, which John originally reported on. Now, UAW Local 4811, representing over 48,000 graduate teaching assistants, researchers, and other academic workers, has called for workers at UC Irvine, UC San Diego, and UC Santa Barbara to join the ongoing strike this week. The strikes are taking place during finals, during which many of these workers administer exams and grade papers. The call came hours after police in riot gear entered the UC Santa Cruz campus, arresting pro-Palestinian protesters who had set up an encampment and blocked the main entrance to campus. The strikers are calling for protection of freedom of speech, amnesty for those who are facing disciplinary action in relation to protests, and divestment from weapons manufacturers, military contractors, and companies profiting off of the Israeli offensive in Gaza. The University of California system claims the strike is unlawful because it violates the no-strike clause in the unions contract. The two parties are currently in mediation before Californias Public Employees Relations Board, which denied the UCs request to enjoin the strike.
In In These Times, Hannah Bowlus writes that the strike is a historic show of labor solidarity with Palestine, modeled after the UAWs Stand-Up Strike last year, and a response to a longer trend of suppression of labor action at the university. In a statement, UCLA history professor Robin D.G. Kelley said No one should be attacked, arrested, threatened for demanding an end to the genocidal war in Gaza. We all deserve a safe work place and administration that protects academic freedom and refuses complicity in genocide.
FULL story at link above.