With labor allies like Newsom ...
Re “A ‘call to action’ on plight of workers,” March 3
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Future of Work Commission called for a new “social compact” for workers — an aspiration that took a knife in the back from Newsom’s silence on Proposition 22 last November.
On the report’s goals for improving workers’ wages, benefits and rights, increasing racial equity and unionization, Proposition 22 did the opposite. It institutionalized ride-share drivers’ status as poverty-level, informal workers.
Under Proposition 22, drivers for companies like Uber and Lyft only qualify for 120% of minimum wage while they are picking up or driving a passenger, which is not an easy feat. The companies do not have to contribute to Social Security, Medicare or unemployment insurance, and few drivers qualify for the paltry healthcare allowance.
As independent contractors, drivers can’t form unions, and with two-thirds of Lyft drivers being people of color and one-third from immigrant families, racial inequality is widened.
Defeating Proposition 22 needed a champion in the bully pulpit to oppose the other side’s $200-million advertising blitz. When workers have friends like Newsom, who needs enemies?
Mark Masaoka Los Angeles
Did it really take a 21member commission 18 months to figure out that wages in the state are too low, there’s a shortage of quality jobs, and workers of color are more likely to live in poverty? Anyone who’s been living in California of late could have said the same thing in a short phone call.
The only surprise here is the commission’s call to address these problems by 2030.
With a Democratic governor and Democratic supermajorities in both houses of the state Legislature, it would seem that many of these issues could be addressed with bold and sweeping legislative actions much sooner than nine years from now.
The real obstacle isn’t the intractability of these problems, but rather the lack of will among our elected officials. Until we get money and special interests out of our state politics, this so-called moonshot is sadly doomed to fail.
Stephen Bulka Los Angeles