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Today in Labor History

Oct. 23, 1902
President Theodore Roosevelt establishes a fact-finding commission that suspends a nine-months-long strike by Western Pennsylvania coal miners fighting for better pay, shorter workdays and union recognition. The strikers ended up winning more pay for fewer hours, but failed to get union recognition. It was the first time that the federal government had intervened as a neutral arbitrator in a Labor dispute.  ~ Labor Tribune

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Updated: Oct. 23 (16:04)

Amazon Says It Has a First Amendment Right to Union Bust
Teamsters Local 355
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Teamsters Local 992
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The Long Road to Union Recognition: Trader Joe’s Workers Press On
Updated On: Oct 18, 2024
Oct. 18, 2024 | ORGANIZING | […] Like with Starbucks and Amazon, union busting –  – or alleged union busting –  – has been part of the Trader Joe’s unionizing story from the jump. Rather than be compelled to follow the law and play by the rules, Trader Joe’s is flipping over the table and challenging the NLRB’s very existence, like so many other companies are doing now that the judiciary all the way up to the Supreme Court is stacked with corporate-serving Trump-appointed judges. Let’s not forget that at the center of all this, always, is working people bravely exercising their rights and trying to improve their lives and their jobs for themselves and their coworkers. And not only has Trader Joe’s been fighting that tooth and nail… In These Times
 
 
Teamsters Local 992
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