From Joey DeFrancesco, DemandProgress.org <[email protected]>
Subject Sign the petition: Ban noncompete contracts!
Date January 19, 2023 5:34 PM
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Hi,

Imagine this: you just accepted a new job with higher pay and benefits.
But a few days later, you get a letter from your former boss threatening
to sue you if you take the new position.

It might sound absurd, but this can and does happen to fast food workers,
baristas, janitors, journalists, interns, and others whose employers
forced them to sign noncompete agreements. Under current law, these
ridiculous noncompetes are legal in most states.^1

Thankfully, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is now moving to ban
noncompetes. But corporate special interests don’t want this to happen,
and are lobbying hard to stop the FTC from taking this important action.
They've even threatened to sue the agency.^2 We need to show that the
people support the FTC’s proposed ban.

[ [link removed] ]Sign the petition: The FTC must protect workers and ban noncompete
clauses!

ADD YOUR NAME

To see how ludicrous noncompetes are for low wage workers, you only need
to read one of the contracts. For instance, sandwich chain Jimmy John’s
has forced workers to sign noncompetes that “prohibited employees during
their employment and for two years afterward from working at any other
business that sells ‘submarine, hero-type, deli-style, pita, and/or
wrapped or rolled sandwiches’ within 2 miles of any Jimmy John’s shop in
the United States.”^3

In the past, noncompetes were only used for high level executive
positions. But now most noncompetes are used by big corporations against
low-wage workers, preventing them from finding new jobs, high pay, and
better benefits. As President Biden said, “One in five workers without a
college education is subject to non-compete agreements. They're
construction workers, hotel workers, disproportionately women and women of
color." The FTC estimates that banning noncompetes would increase worker
pay by up to $300 billion per year.^4

Noncompetes also stifle innovation and competition. As Teen Vogue
explained, “Not competing is in the name!” If a worker under a noncompete
develops a brilliant new innovation in their field, legally they can’t
quit their job to start their own business.^1

Corporate special interests are currently lobbying in D.C. to preserve
noncompetes. Now is the time to urge the FTC to follow through and end
these anti-worker contracts.

[ [link removed] ]Add your name: the FTC must ban noncompetes to stop worker exploitation
and encourage innovation!

Thank you for taking action,

Joey and the team at Demand Progress

[ [link removed] ]DONATE

Sources:
1. Teen Vogue, “Noncompete Clauses: What Are They and How Is the FTC
Trying to Ban Them?,” [ [link removed] ]January 18, 2023.
2. CNBC, “U.S. Chamber of Commerce threatens to sue the FTC over proposed
ban on noncompete clauses,” [ [link removed] ]January 12, 2023.
3. Reuters, “Jimmy John's settles Illinois lawsuit over non-compete
agreements,” [ [link removed] ]December 7, 2016.
4. NPR, “Millions of workers are subject to noncompete agreements. They
could soon be banned,” [ [link removed] ]January 5, 2023.
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