JULY 23, 2020
Meyerson on TAP
Who Should Say When a Workplace Is Safe? The Workers, That’s Who.
Back in April, Nelson Lichtenstein, the dean of American labor historians, wrote a piece for us arguing that states should establish workers’ councils that would decide when it was safe to return to their worksites and would have the authority to monitor those worksites for safety conditions when work resumed.

While I know of no state that’s enacted anything so sensible, Los Angeles County—which, with ten million residents, is a lot bigger than a host of states—became the first jurisdiction to do so on Tuesday, when the County Board of Supervisors passed a partial version of this idea. Noting that public-health officials were completely overwhelmed by the number of possibly unsafe workplaces, the five-member Board of Supes explicitly authorized the establishment of workers’ councils with the power to monitor workplace safety. "Employees must be allowed to form public health councils without retaliation by their employer," the motion read.

L.A.’s Board of Supes contains some of the most progressive elected officials in the nation, and on this measure, they were lobbied by the city’s union movement, also among the nation’s most innovative. Indeed, the COVID crisis has brought together unusually broad alliances of quite different unions around issues of worker safety and adequate and nondiscriminatory funding. One such alliance is that of unions of university employees—from tenured professors to graduate students to office workers to maintenance employees—that penned a letter to university administrators earlier this month calling on them not only to ensure worker, student, and public safety before reopening but also to avoid layoffs and pay cuts and provide the assistance that minority and poor students need now more than ever. The signatories included faculty unions from the public university systems of California and Massachusetts, graduate student unions from across the nation, and support staff unions from across the South. In both its geographic and occupational diversity, the letter illustrates the growing militance, sophistication, and scope of today’s workers movement—something that the Los Angeles ordinance also recognizes by establishing a new form of worker power outside the strictures of the nation’s long dysfunctional labor law.

Back to School
Universities that lived by the market model during the boom years face an extinction event as the bubble bursts and their business model pushes them to make perverse decisions about campus opening.
BY FRANCOIS FURSTENBERG
Can a Pipeline Company Invoke Eminent Domain? A Louisiana Court Ducks.
The company must pay property owners for its abuses, but its ability to take property in the cause of the ‘public good’—however tenuous—remains intact.
BY MARCIA BROWN
America: Still Going Wrong After All These Years
In an update of his best-seller on the decline and fall of the middle classes, James Steele explores the roots of the current economic crisis and possible pathways to the other side. A Prospect interview. BY GABRIELLE GURLEY
Unsanitized: Mitt Romney Wants to Use the Crisis to Cut Your Social Security
A Bowles-Simpson-style process to cut benefits could end up in the Republican economic relief bill. This is The COVID-19 Daily Report for July 23, 2020. BY DAVID DAYEN

 
 
 
 
 
 
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