Los Angeles Times

Labor fight takes flight

Workers in L.A., across U.S. rally for higher pay as unions face a new administra­tion in Washington, efforts to roll back previous victories

- By Samantha Masunaga

LAX workers march Tuesday as part of a nationwide “day of disruption.” Union leaders fear the new administra­tion could roll back labor victories.

In a scene reminiscen­t of old-fashioned labor activism, workers and their supporters marched Tuesday through Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport and in airports and restaurant­s across the U.S., demanding higher pay and union representa­tion for low-wage workers.

The protests were peaceful, but they may just be a prelude of battles to come as unions face a new administra­tion in Washington and efforts to roll back labor victories.

In recent years, California and other states and cities have increased their minimum wages. A federal ruling put employers on the hook for labor violations, even if they used workers hired by another business. And another federal ruling sped up the union election process.

But labor economists say that under the Trump administra­tion, and a Republican-controlled Congress, some of these issues, as well as unionizati­on in general, could be curtailed.

“There’s a whole set of areas where I think we’ll have to expect rollbacks,” said

Chris Tilly, an economist and professor of urban planning at UCLA and former director of the university’s Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. “Labor will hope the Democrats fight for some of these things, but some of them are very much under the discretion of the administra­tion and their appointees.”

One of these is the makeup of the National Labor Relations Board, the five-member, quasi-judicial federal agency that enforces employees’ rights to organize or dissolve unions and also makes decisions in cases involving unfair labor practices in the private sector.

Immediatel­y upon entering office, Trump will be able to fill two vacancies on the board. Another spot will open up in 2017, when board member Philip Miscimarra’s term expires. The last two members’ terms expire in 2018 and 2019.

The board currently has a liberal majority, but labor experts expect that to change with the new Trump appointees.

That move could change key decisions the board made during the Obama administra­tion, such as its ruling in 2015 that loosened the definition of a joint employer to include companies that use staffing agencies, contractor­s or even fast-food franchises, or its decision that graduate students who help teach or do research at private universiti­es are employees and have union representa­tion rights.

“It’s quite likely, with conservati­ve appointees to the board, that we could see ... reversals in a number of areas, which could mean further obstacles to unions organizing through the law,” said Ken Jacobs, chairman of the UC Berkeley Labor Center.

Trump’s new appointee to the Supreme Court could also have implicatio­ns for public unions. In March, the justices deadlocked on a lawsuit that would have struck down mandatory “fair share fees” that cover the cost of collective bargaining for municipal employees, transit workers, teachers and college instructor­s in California and 22 other mostly Democratic states. These fees are prohibited in Southern states and some in the Rust Belt that have “right to work” laws.

The Supreme Court tie kept the mandatory fees in place — for now.

“The practical effect has got to be to weaken unions considerab­ly, and to force them to pile a lot of resources into retaining membership,” said Tilly of UCLA. “That would be a very serious obstacle to any attempts by labor to maintain its power and flex its muscles.”

One issue unlikely to lose steam is the effort to boost the minimum wage.

This has been a longstandi­ng issue for conservati­ve groups, which say boosting the minimum wage could force small businesses to shutter or cut worker hours.

But labor experts say an increase in the minimum wage has proved to be a popular issue with voters of all political parties.

Though Arizona voted for Trump on election day, it joined Colorado, Maine, and Washington in passing referendum­s to increase the minimum wage. Earlier this year, California and New York passed laws to gradually boost the states’ minimum wage to $15 an hour.

And in 2015, the Los Angeles City Council and the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s approved a law to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020.

“Where we’ve seen most of the action in recent years is at the state and local level, and I expect that to continue,” Jacobs said.

“The Fight for $15 has really brought that issue out into the public eye in a very effective way and changed people’s understand­ings of what’s needed and people’s sense of what’s possible,” he said.

The nationwide “day of disruption” protests held Tuesday marked the fourth anniversar­y of a New York City fast-food workers strike that launched the fight for a $15-an-hour minimum wage. A major backer of the campaign, and the latest protests, is the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union.

In Los Angeles, about 40 people were arrested after refusing the LAPD’s call to disperse from an intersecti­on near downtown Los Angeles. They were among a larger peaceful demonstrat­ion of more than 200 people outside a McDonald’s at East 7th and Alameda streets.

Later in the day, about 600 people marched through LAX and surroundin­g streets.

The group, which included airport workers as well as child-care, healthcare and fast-food workers, met in front of the airport around noon at Century and Sepulveda boulevards before marching through the airport and into some of the terminals.

The demonstrat­ion lasted about an hour, and police said no arrests were made. LAX officials said no service was disrupted, though traffic slowed in front of some terminals.

Trump’s plans to cut taxes sharply for those with high incomes could make the issue of raising the lowest wage “more powerful and compelling,” said William Gould IV, a professor emeritus at Stanford Law School, current chairman of the California Agricultur­al Labor Relations Board and a former chairman of the NLRB.

“In an era of inequality, it seems to me that will provide more fuel to organizati­ons representi­ng low-income people,” he said.

Kendall Fells, the national organizing director of the Fight for $15 campaign, said the coalition has seen “exponentia­l growth” in the last couple of months and that there is a “renewed sense of urgency because of the election.” He emphasized that the group would have protested, regardless of who won the election.

“Even within all of the constraint­s … I think there will continue to be efforts by unions to continue to organize,” Jacobs said. “People will continue to look for and find ways to organize and express their collective power.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ??
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times
 ?? Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? UNION WORKERS and supporters march at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport as they call for a $15-anhour wage for LAX employees. The rally Tuesday lasted about an hour. Police said there were no arrests.
Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times UNION WORKERS and supporters march at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport as they call for a $15-anhour wage for LAX employees. The rally Tuesday lasted about an hour. Police said there were no arrests.
 ??  ?? AMONG THE changes that President-elect Donald Trump is expected to make is to the makeup of the National Labor Relations Board. Above, travelers at LAX check in as demonstrat­ors march by.
AMONG THE changes that President-elect Donald Trump is expected to make is to the makeup of the National Labor Relations Board. Above, travelers at LAX check in as demonstrat­ors march by.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? LABOR EXPERTS say a hike in the minimum wage has proved to be a popular issue with voters of all political parties. Above, protesters at LAX on Tuesday.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times LABOR EXPERTS say a hike in the minimum wage has proved to be a popular issue with voters of all political parties. Above, protesters at LAX on Tuesday.

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